Author: Daniel

  • UN postpones global carbon tax on shipping after US-led opposition

    UN postpones global carbon tax on shipping after US-led opposition

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    After a U.S.-led campaign, the United Nations has postponed a vote on a proposal to impose the world’s first global carbon tax on shipping, delaying the decision by one year.

    The rule was expected to come up for a vote this week as part of the U.N. International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) “Net-Zero Framework.” But a majority of member nations voted to defer it after failing to reach consensus amid U.S. opposition.

    Backed by the European Union and Brazil, the plan seeks to raise billions from carriers that exceed new emissions limits, channeling the revenue toward climate adaptation and clean-fuel projects in developing nations.

    Washington and Riyadh led the opposition. Saudi Arabia introduced a motion Friday to delay discussions for one year, which passed with 57 countries in favor and 49 opposed.

    TRUMP’S GLOBAL RESET OF TRADE RELATIONSHIPS WILL REMAIN IN THE SPOTLIGHT THIS WEEK

    Rubio next to Trump at NATO presser

    President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio appear together during a NATO press briefing in Brussels on June 25, 2025.  (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    The Trump administration came out forcefully against the measure this week, calling it an “unconstitutional global tax” that would drive up energy and consumer prices. In a series of statements, President Donald Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Mike Waltz vowed that the United States would vote a “hard no” when delegates meet in London on Friday and urged allies to do the same.

    “I am outraged that the International Maritime Organization is voting in London this week to pass a global Carbon Tax,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “The United States will NOT stand for this Global Green New Scam Tax on Shipping, and will not adhere to it in any way, shape, or form. We will not tolerate increased prices on American Consumers OR the creation of a Green New Scam Bureaucracy to spend YOUR money on their Green dreams. Stand with the United States, and vote NO in London tomorrow!”

    Administration officials argue the framework would give unelected international bureaucrats the power to tax U.S. companies and consumers while doing little to cut global emissions.

    SUPREME COURT MUST FREEZE THE CLIMATE EXTORTION OF OUR ENERGY INDUSTRY

    Cargo ship

    A commercial container vessel moves through the Port of Rotterdam as the United Nations debates a proposed global carbon tax on shipping. (REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo)

    “This week, the UN is attempting to pass the first global carbon tax, which will increase energy, food, and fuel costs across the world. We will not allow the UN to tax American citizens and companies,” Rubio wrote on X.

    “This is a bigger deal than I think anybody realizes,” U.N. Ambassador Mike Waltz said on Fox News.

    marco rubio

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio pictured in the White House.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

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    Supporters counter that a uniform carbon price is the only way to push the shipping industry — responsible for nearly 3% of global greenhouse gas emissions — to meet net-zero targets by mid-century.

    The proposal will be decided at the IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee session in London, running through Friday, Oct. 17, where nations must reach consensus for it to take effect.

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  • Trump said that Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro doesn’t want to mess with the US

    Trump said that Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro doesn’t want to mess with the US

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    President Donald Trump confirmed reports that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro offered to grant the U.S. access to Venezuelan oil and other natural resources, as tensions heat up between the U.S. and Venezuela amid Trump’s crusade against drugs. 

    Trump said that Maduro put forth the proposal because the Venezuelan leader doesn’t want to mess with the U.S. 

    “You’re right. You know why? Because he doesn’t want to f*** around with the United States,” Trump told reporters Friday during a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. 

    The New York Times reported on Oct. 10 that Maduro proposed offering current and future oil and gold projects in Venezuela to U.S. companies, and stipulated U.S. businesses would be granted “preferential” contracts. Likewise, the Times reported that other conditions Maduro put forth included cutting down on energy and mining contracts with U.S. adversaries — including China, Iran and Russia. 

    However, the Trump administration wrote off the offer, and instead, said it was no longer interested in engaging in diplomatic efforts, according to the Times. 

    This is a breaking news story and will be updated. 

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  • Texas Gov. Abbott orders resources to Austin due to ‘Antifa-linked protest’

    Texas Gov. Abbott orders resources to Austin due to ‘Antifa-linked protest’

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    Lone Star State Gov. Greg Abbott has ordered the Texas Department of Public Safety and Texas National Guard to send resources to the state capital in advance of what he called “an Antifa-linked protest.”

    “Today, I directed the Dept. of Public Safety and National Guard to surge forces into Austin ahead of an Antifa-linked protest. Texas will NOT tolerate chaos. Anyone destroying property or committing acts of violence will be swiftly arrested. Law and order will be enforced,” Abbott asserted in a Thursday post on X.

    While Abbott did not specify what protest he was speaking about, there are scads of “No Kings” events scheduled for Saturday around the nation, including one in Austin, Texas.

    ‘NO KINGS’ ORGANIZER DISCOURAGES VIOLENCE FOLLOWING COAST-TO-COAST ARRESTS

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announces a new public safety initiative to combat violent crime in Greater Houston during a press conference in Houston, on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025. (Jason Fochtman/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)

    On Friday, Fox News Digital reached out to Abbott’s office, which responded by pointing to a press release that states the governor “directed the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) and Texas National Guard to deploy personnel and tactical assets to Austin ahead of a planned antifa-linked demonstration to protect Texans and their property.” 

    Fox News Digital also reached out to No Kings for comment on Friday and received a response from the American Civil Liberties Union, which provided a statement from Ellen Flenniken, deputy director of the Justice Division of the ACLU.

    ‘NO KINGS’ MOVEMENT AND WHAT IT WANTS: INSIDE THE MESSAGE DRIVING SATURDAY’S NATIONWIDE PROTESTS

    Demonstrators carry a No Kings banner

    Demonstrators carry a large “No Kings” banner through downtown Los Angeles on June 14, 2025. (DAVID PASHAEE/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

    “Millions of people are anticipated to peacefully protest at more than 2,700 No Kings events across the country on Saturday. While President Trump and his allies are trying to intimidate us into silence by deploying troops to our cities, the best way to protect our First Amendment rights is to keep using them,” Flenniken said in the statement.

    Austin Mayor Kirk Watson noted in part of a Thursday post on X, “I have confirmed that the National Guard will be prepared to assist the Texas Department of Public Safety and otherwise take actions on Saturday, if deemed necessary. We are told that the Guard will not be on the streets of Austin unless there is a determination that there is an emergency need.”

    SOROS FOUNDATION HELPING FUND ANTI-TRUMP ‘NO KINGS’ PROTESTS NATIONWIDE

    Austin, Texas

    Atmosphere during the Austin Food & Wine Festival at Auditorium Shores on Nov. 2, 2024 in Austin, Texas.  (Rick Kern/Getty Images)

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    Texas Democratic Party chair Kendall Scudder accused Abbott of “doing everything he can to suck up to Donald Trump, including taking a page from Trump’s authoritarian playbook, and intimidating people exercising their First Amendment right.”

    President Donald Trump issued an executive order last month in which he declared, “I hereby designate Antifa as a ‘domestic terrorist organization.’”

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  • Karoline Leavitt fires back after Hakeem Jeffries’ personal attack amid shutdown

    Karoline Leavitt fires back after Hakeem Jeffries’ personal attack amid shutdown

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    EXCLUSIVE: White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt is hitting back at House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., after he called her “sick” among other attacks on Friday morning.

    “Hakeem and Democrats are lashing out because they know what I said is true,” Leavitt told Fox News Digital. “The Democrat Party’s elected officials absolutely cater to pro-Hamas terrorists, illegal aliens and violent criminals. House Democrats voted against a resolution condemning Hamas following the horrific October 7th terrorist attacks, and Democrats cheered on pro-Hamas radicals while they hijacked America’s college campuses and harassed Jewish students.”

    “Democrats opened our borders and allowed tens of millions of illegal aliens into our country over the past four years, including rapists and murderers, because they view them as future voters,” she continued. “Democrats coddle violent criminals and support soft-on-crime policies like cashless bail that let violent offenders back on the streets to hurt law-abiding citizens.”

    She then went after Jeffries directly while criticizing Democrats as a whole for blocking the GOP’s federal funding bill.

    SCREAMING MATCH ERUPTS BETWEEN HAKEEM JEFFRIES, MIKE LAWLER AS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN CHAOS CONTINUES

    Hakeem Jeffries and Karoline Leavitt

    House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries and White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt traded barbs on Friday. (Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images; Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

    “Democrats do NOT serve the interests of the American people. Hakeem Jeffries is an America Last, stone-cold loser. Now open up the government and stop simping to try to get your radical left-wing base to like you,” Leavitt said.

    Fox News Digital reached out to Jeffries’ office for a response.

    Earlier Friday, Jeffries criticized Republicans as a whole for their attacks against Democrats, before he turned the focus to Leavitt specifically during a press conference.

    “You’ve got Karoline Leavitt, who’s sick. She’s out of control,” Jeffries said. “And I’m not sure whether she’s just demented, ignorant, a stone-cold liar or all of the above.”

    AOC DROPS THOUSANDS ON LUXURY HOTELS WHILE ‘FIGHTING OLIGARCHY’ WITH SANDERS, FILINGS REVEAL

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt at the podium.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks at a press briefing in the James Brady Press Briefing room at the White House in Washington, Oct. 6, 2025. (Associated Press)

    He added, “But the notion that an official White House spokesperson would say that the Democratic Party consists of terrorists, violent criminals and undocumented immigrants makes no sense, that this is what the American people are getting from the Trump administration in the middle of a shutdown.”

    Tensions have run high on both sides as the shutdown drags on, and the standoff shows no signs of slowing down.

    image of the Capitol building with falling money

    The government shut down after Congress failed to reach an agreement on federal funding. (Getty Images)

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    In fact, it’s expected to roll into its fourth week after Senate Democrats blocked the GOP’s federal funding measure for a tenth time on Thursday before leaving Washington for the weekend.

    Republicans put forward last month a seven-week extension of fiscal year (FY) 2025 funding levels, called a continuing resolution (CR), aimed at giving congressional negotiators more time to strike a long-term deal for FY2026.

    But Democrats in the House and Senate were infuriated by being sidelined in those talks. The majority of Democrats are refusing to accept any deal that does not include serious healthcare concessions, at least extending COVID-19 pandemic-era Obamacare subsidies that are set to expire at the end of this year.

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  • Jeffries attacks Leavitt as ‘sick’ and ‘demented’ amid government shutdown

    Jeffries attacks Leavitt as ‘sick’ and ‘demented’ amid government shutdown

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    The top Democrat in the House of Representatives attacked White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt with a slew of insults on Friday.

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., accused Republican officials of unjustly going after Democrats amid a controversy over a swastika flag found in a House GOP lawmaker’s office this week, though the lawmaker denied he or his staff played any role. Jeffries made the comments during a press conference with reporters on day 17 of the ongoing government shutdown.

    “You’ve got Karoline Leavitt, who’s sick. She’s out of control. And I’m not sure whether she’s just demented, ignorant, a stone-cold liar, or all of the above,” Jeffries said.

    “But the notion that an official White House spokesperson would say that the Democratic Party consists of terrorists, violent criminals, and undocumented immigrants makes no sense, that this is what the American people are getting from the Trump administration in the middle of a shutdown.”

    58 HOUSE DEMS VOTE AGAINST RESOLUTION HONORING ‘LIFE AND LEGACY’ OF CHARLIE KIRK

    A split image of Hakeem Jeffries and Karoline Leavitt

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries attacked White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt as “sick” and “demented” on Friday. (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images; Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for a response.

    Jeffries had been asked about the swastika, which was reportedly embedded into a small American flag that was hanging on a cork board in the office of Rep. Dave Taylor, R-Ohio. It was first reported by a local Ohio social media reporter who goes by the X handle “The Rooster.”

    Taylor said in a statement to Fox News that several offices were targeted with the flag, which he said was the work of an “unidentified group” in a coordinated opposition campaign.

    SCREAMING MATCH ERUPTS BETWEEN HAKEEM JEFFRIES, MIKE LAWLER AS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN CHAOS CONTINUES

    American flag in Rep. Dave Taylor's office

    An American flag altered with a swastika in an office on Capitol Hill. (Obtained by Politico)

    “New details have emerged from a coordinated investigation into the vile symbol that appeared in my office. Numerous Republican offices have confirmed that they were targeted by an unidentified group or individual who distributed American flags bearing a similar symbol, which were initially indistinguishable from an ordinary American flag to the naked eye,” Taylor said. 

    “After a full-scale internal investigation, I am confident that no employee of this office would knowingly display such a despicable image, and the flag in question was taken down immediately upon the discovery of the obscured symbol it bore.”

    It’s not immediately clear why the events made Jeffries invoke Leavitt specifically, however.

    Tensions have run high on both sides as the shutdown drags on, and the standoff shows no signs of slowing down.

    Chuck Schumer

    Senate Democrats, led by Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., tanked the GOP’s funding bill ten times. (Reuters)

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    In fact, it’s expected to roll into its fourth week after Senate Democrats blocked the GOP’s federal funding measure for a fourth time on Thursday before leaving Washington for the weekend.

    Republicans put forward last month a seven-week extension of fiscal year (FY) 2025 funding levels, called a continuing resolution (CR), aimed at giving congressional negotiators more time to strike a long-term deal for FY2026.

    But Democrats in the House and Senate were infuriated by being sidelined in those talks. The majority of Democrats are refusing to accept any deal that does not include serious healthcare concessions, at least extending COVID-19 pandemic-era Obamacare subsidies that are set to expire at the end of this year.

    Fox News’ Chad Pergram contributed to this report.

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  • ‘No Kings’ protests against Trump policies set for Oct. 18 nationwide

    ‘No Kings’ protests against Trump policies set for Oct. 18 nationwide

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    “No Kings” protests against President Donald Trump and his administration’s policies are set to kick-off in cities nationwide Saturday to declare, “America has No Kings.”

    “We’re standing together against the abuses of power, cruelty, and corruption. On October 18, we gather to remind President Trump and his enablers: America has No Kings!” the movement’s website states of the upcoming Saturday protests/ 

    Protests declaring America has “no kings” first mobilized back in February on President’s Day to denounce the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency and cuts to the federal government. The “No Kings” movement, however, gained national prominence in June, when Trump held a miliary parade honoring the U.S. Army’s 250th anniversary, which also fell on his 79th birthday. 

    Tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets of Washington, Los Angeles, Denver, New York, Philadelphia and elsewhere to protest what they viewed as Trump’s “coronation” day, as well as other administration policies, including its ongoing deportation efforts. 

    ADVOCACY GROUP CEO CLAIMS HE WAS OFFERED $20 MILLION TO RECRUIT PROTESTERS FOR ANTI-TRUMP DEMONSTRATIONS

    Law enforcement at the Anti-ICE riots in Los Angeles.

    Anti-ICE rioters and police face-off in Los Angeles June 14, 2025, when “No Kings” protests were held in the city. (Jamie Vera/Fox News)

    “The world saw the power of the people. President Trump’s birthday parade was drowned out by protests in every state and across the globe. His attempt to turn June 14 into a coronation collapsed, and the story became the strength of a movement rising against his authoritarian power grabs,” the “No Kings” website outlines. 

    Four months later, “No Kings” protests will be held in cities such as Philadelphia, New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and Hartford, Connecticut, to protest the Trump administration with a heightened focus on speaking out against the administration’s efforts to deport millions of illegal immigrants residing in the U.S. The group states on its website that it anticipates “millions across the country” will “march against authoritarian politics and billionaire takeover.” 

    PROTESTERS TARGET TRUMP ADMIN POLICIES WITH MARCH TO WHITE HOUSE, DEMONSTRATIONS THROUGHOUT COUNTRY

    No Kings protest in Los Angeles

    Protesters carry a banner representing the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution in downtown Los Angeles during an anti-Trump “No Kings Day” demonstration in a city that has been the focus of protests against Trump’s immigration raids June 14, 2025.  (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

    “President Trump has doubled down. His administration is sending masked agents into our streets, terrorizing our communities,” the “No Kings” website states. “They are targeting immigrant families, profiling, arresting and detaining people without warrants. Threatening to overtake elections. Gutting healthcare, environmental protections, and education when families need them most. Rigging maps to silence voters. Ignoring mass shootings at our schools and in our communities. Driving up the cost of living while handing out massive giveaways to billionaire allies, as families struggle.”

    The protests are organized by left-wing groups such as Indivisible, a grassroots progressive organization behind anti-Trump protests stretching back to the 2016 election, as well as other groups such as the American Federation of Teachers, ACLU, Greenpeace, the Human Rights Campaign, MoveOn, National Nurses United, Public Citizen and Service Employees International Union, according to its website. 

    Anti-Trump protesters march in DC

    Protesters march during a “No Kings” rally in Washington, June 14, 2025. (David Dee Delgado for Fox News Digital)

    The group repeatedly calls on participants to peacefully protest on its website. Los Angeles’ “No Kings” protests in June did devolve into chaos, as “agitators who came here with the purpose of creating chaos” attacked police officers, the Los Angeles County sheriff told local media at the time. 

    The Saturday protests are expected to focus on Trump’s immigration policies, including Trump’s alleged “authoritarian takeovers of cities—deploying federal forces, seizing local police departments, and funding mass detention and deportation operations,” as well as the movement’s ongoing claims that Trump is conducting himself more like a monarch than a president. 

    WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT TODAY’S ‘NO KINGS’ ANTI-TRUMP RALLIES ACROSS THE US

    “President Trump has openly said he wants a third term and is already acting like a monarch—seizing control of D.C., threatening other cities, and using federal forces against his own people. But the American people don’t bow to kings. Together, we will peacefully mobilize, yet again, in huge numbers to reject this corruption and abuse of power—it’s in our DNA as a country,” the group’s website states. 

    Fox News Digital reached out to organizers of the movement for additional comment on the upcoming demonstrations but did not immediately receive a reply on Thursday. 

    “Who cares?” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told Fox News Digital when asked about the upcoming protests on Saturday.

    No Kings protest in Los Angeles

    “No Kings” protests against the Trump administration are expected to be held in cities nationwide on Oct. 18.  (Ringo Chiu/AFP via Getty Images)

    The Trump administration has been on an immigration blitz since Trump was sworn back into office on Jan. 20, as federal law enforcement officials such as ICE agents converged on cities in targeted efforts to remove illegal immigrants. Trump has simultaneously targeted individual U.S. cities for overall crime clean-ups, including federalizing the Washington, D.C., police force in August, including ordering the National Guard to the city, with Los Angeles, Memphis and Portland facing similar crime reduction efforts. Trump’s attempt to roll out crime clean up initiatives in Portland and Los Angeles, however, are tied up in the courts.  

    ‘NO KINGS’ RALLIES ARE A TROJAN HORSE FOR RADICAL, VIOLENT LEFTISTS

    Trump’s 2024 campaign included a large focus on ending the illegal immigration crisis in the U.S. and bringing down crime, with voters frequently pointing to the issues as among their top concerns heading to the ballot boxes.

    No Kings protest in Florida

    Miguel Hurtado marches with others who gathered near the Mar-a-Lago home of President Donald Trump during a “No Kings Day” protest June 14, 2025, in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    “Whether you’re outraged by attacks on civil rights, skyrocketing costs, abductions and disappearances, the gutting of essential services, or the assault on free speech, this moment is for you. Whether you’ve been in the fight for years or you’re just fed up and ready to take action, this moment is for you,” the “No Kings” website states of its objectives for Oct. 18. 

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    The protests follow Trump and his administration securing a ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel, which included the president traveling to Israel and Egypt earlier in October to speak with world leaders directly, and as Trump holds talks Russian President Vladimir Putin Thursday and a meeting with Ukraine President Vlodomyr Zelenskyy Friday at the White House as part as a separate war between those nations continues raging since 2022.

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  • Government shutdown leaves gun permit applications in limbo, Republicans warn

    Government shutdown leaves gun permit applications in limbo, Republicans warn

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    FIRST ON FOX: A group of 30 House Republicans is raising alarms about how the government shutdown is impacting gun owners across the U.S.

    Rep. Ben Cline, R-Va., led his colleagues in a letter to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) Thursday urging its acting director to reclassify certain employees as essential workers, warning that current parameters are leaving many gun owners’ applications for certain items in limbo.

    “As a result of this Democrat-led shutdown, ATF, like most federal agencies, is operating at a reduced workforce. And while Democrats continue to fight for benefits for illegal aliens, the constitutional rights of Americans are being infringed as a result,” read the letter, first obtained by Fox News Digital.

    “That is because, under federal law, Second Amendment rights cannot be fully exercised without the involvement of the federal government. This clearly is not what the Framers intended, but it is this country’s unfortunate reality.”

    SCREAMING MATCH ERUPTS BETWEEN HAKEEM JEFFRIES, MIKE LAWLER AS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN CHAOS CONTINUES

    image of the U.S. Capitol next to a gun range

    A group of 30 House GOP lawmakers are pushing for the ATF to reclassify federal employees, warning the shutdown is risking gun owners’ rights. (Samuel Corum/Getty Images; Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images)

    The government shutdown is in its 17th day, with Democrats and Republicans still unable to agree on a path forward on federal funding.

    It’s led to thousands of government employees being furloughed and a wide array of federal services paused. Shutdowns force federal agencies to triage their output, deciding which workers and services are “essential” and must keep working with limited or no pay, and what to shutter altogether.

    Much of the ATF’s non-law enforcement staff was furloughed, and processing of new and renewed civilian federal firearms licenses was stalled, according to the Firearm Industry Trade Association.

    58 HOUSE DEMS VOTE AGAINST RESOLUTION HONORING ‘LIFE AND LEGACY’ OF CHARLIE KIRK

    Rep. Ben Cline on Capitol Hill

    Rep. Ben Cline, R-Va., participates in a House Judiciary Committee markup on Capitol Hill in Washington, May 16, 2024.  (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

    “As you know, National Firearms Act (NFA) application examiners are among the ATF employees currently furloughed during this shutdown. This means that Americans are currently unable to acquire widely popular NFA-regulated firearms and safety equipment, such as shortbarreled rifles and silencers, because no one at ATF will approve their applications at this time,” the House GOP letter read.

    “Indeed, NFA application approvals are related to the discharge of the President’s constitutional duties and powers. The President of the United States is charged with protecting and defending the Constitution of the United States, and this includes the Second Amendment,” it continued.

    The House Republicans also argued that the shutdown-forced pause could risk Americans’ safety and property — pointing out the ATF similarly stopped processing NFA applications in previous shutdowns.

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    “During these periods of indefinite delay, ATF deprived Americans of access to regulated arms. The inability to acquire firearms necessarily infringes Americans’ ability to protect themselves, their loved ones, and their property,” the lawmakers wrote.

    “But, as Acting ATF Director, you have significant authority to propose or classify which ATF positions are designated as ‘excepted’ during a lapse in appropriations, subject to DOJ’s contingency plan, OMB and OPM guidance, and the legal constraints on what may lawfully continue during a shutdown.”

    Fox News Digital reached out to the ATF for a response but did not immediately hear back.

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  • Hochul backs James after indictment, cites justice system weaponization

    Hochul backs James after indictment, cites justice system weaponization

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    New York Democrat Gov. Kathy Hochul offered her support of Empire State Attorney General Letitia James when she was first indicted on charges of bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution, following years of the New York governor celebrating legal challenges originating in her home state and elsewhere against President Donald Trump. 

    “New Yorkers know @NewYorkStateAGJames for her integrity, her independence, and her relentless fight for justice. What we’re seeing today is nothing less than the weaponization of the Justice Department to punish those who hold the powerful accountable,” Hochul posted to X following James’ indictment. 

    A grand jury in Virginia indicted James Thursday, months after Federal Housing Finance Director Bill Pulte said in a criminal referral to the Department of Justice in April that James allegedly falsified mortgage records to obtain more favorable loans. She faces charges of bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution.

    Pulte alleged in his criminal referral that James purchased a home in Norfolk, Virginia, in 2023, but identified it as her primary residence on mortgage documents and a Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac form. James is legally required to live in New York as a statewide elected official in that state. 

    LEGAL EXPERT CALLS OUT ‘IRONIC’ TWIST AS NY AG WHO PROSECUTED TRUMP FACES FEDERAL BANK FRAUD CHARGES

    Letitia James speaking in press conference

    Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac offices in New York will shutter in response to Attorney General Letitia James’ alleged “corrupt” business practices, Fox News Digital learned.  (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    “No one is above the law. The charges as alleged in this case represent intentional, criminal acts and tremendous breaches of the public’s trust,” U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia Lindsey Halligan said when James was indicted. “The facts and the law in this case are clear, and we will continue following them to ensure that justice is served.”

    Hochul, as well as other prominent Democrats, have pointed to the indictment as alleged “political weaponization” and political persecution of a Trump foe at the hands of the administration. 

    James and Trump have long traded barbs, with James campaigning for the attorney general job in 2018 vowing to pursue legal charges against Trump if elected. Her office ultimately filed nearly 100 legal challenges against the first Trump administration and vowed to continue the legal battles upon his re-election in November 2024. 

    MAMDANI ASSAILS TRUMP FOR ‘POLITICAL RETRIBUTION’ AGAINST LETITIA JAMES IN SWEEPING DEFENSE OF EMBATTLED AG

    Trump accused Democrats of waging lawfare — which is understood as leveraging the courts to gain political advantage — as a last-ditch attempt to prevent him from running for the Oval Office again in the 2024 cycle and securing another federal election win. Trump, for example, was indicted and found guilty in a New York case that accused him of falsifying business records, he was indicted on racketeering charges in Georgia, faced federal criminal cases claiming he mishandled sensitive government documents after his first presidency, and another claiming he attempted to overturn the 2020 election results. 

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul

    Governor Hochul said “I favor free enterprise” at an event in the Hamptons on Saturday in response to socialist Zohran Mamdani’s plan for government-run grocery stores. (Julia Nikhinson, File/The Associated Press)

    Trump also faced civil cases, including James accusing Trump and the Trump Organization of inflating asset values in a lawsuit that found Trump and his companies liable. 

    Fox News Digital took a look back at Hochul’s previous comments on Trump and the legal cases that plagued the president during his first administration through his interim as the 45th and 47th president, and found the governor frequently celebrated cases that conservatives identified as “lawfare.” 

    Fox News Digital reached out to Hochul’s office for comment on her past remarks on legal cases against Trump as she promotes the narrative that the administration is weaponizng the justice system against political foes but did not immediately receive a reply. Fox Digital specifically asked if Hochul stands by her previous comments that “no one is above the law,” considering James’ indictment, but did not receive replies. 

    Trump is the first and only president to be impeached twice by the House, with Hochul remaking during his first impeachment in 2019 — which accused him of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress related to allegedly seeking foreign interference from Ukraine to boost his re-election efforts in 2020 — that no one is above the law.

    LETITIA JAMES’ OWN WORDS COME BACK TO HAUNT HER AFTER FEDERAL BANK FRAUD CHARGES FILED

    “It’s really quite simple — NO ONE is above the law. Not now, not ever,” she posted to Facebook. “Speaker Pelosi & Democrats in Congress are holding the president accountable because they have a patriotic duty to uphold our Constitution, not play partisan politics.”

    hochul-james

    Letitia James and Kathy Hochul pose after the rally at 1199 SEIU (Service Employees International Union) Headquarters.  (Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)

    As Trump stood trial for the civil fraud case launched by James that accused Trump and Trump Organization of financial fraud, Hochul commented that she had “full confidence” that he would be held accountable, while also remarking that he had “temper tantrums” in the court. 

    “Former President Donald Trump is testifying in an unprecedented civil trial brought by our own Attorney General, Tish James. So far from telling the truth as he’s required to do, he’s throwing temper tantrums from the witness stand and verbally attacking judges and courtroom staff. His conduct has been a disgrace and I have full confidence that Donald Trump will be held accountable for his actions,” she said in November of 2023. 

    A month later, the Democratic governor appeared to throw her support behind a lawsuit that aimed to prevent Trump’s name from appearing on voting ballots for the 2024 election. 

    NEW YORK AG LETITIA JAMES’ INDICTMENT SPARKS SHARP PARTISAN DIVIDE

    A group of Colorado voters brought forth a lawsuit in 2022 arguing Trump should be deemed ineligible from holding political office under a Civil War-era insurrection clause. The lawsuit argued Trump’s action on Jan. 6, 2021 — when supporters breached the U.S. Capitol — violated a clause in the 14th Amendment that prevents officers of the United States, members of Congress or state legislatures who “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” against the Constitution from holding political office.

    “Jan. 6 will live in infamy. Shame on us if we forget that,” Hochul said in December 2023, when the Colorado Supreme Court declared him ineligible to run for president. “Shame on us what happened to this country when a Capitol that I used to proudly walk in as a member of Congress was literally under siege, people died, people were injured, and if he doesn’t take responsibility for that, then the American people ought to hold him accountable. So that’s what’s starting in Colorado.”

    The U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled in March 2024 to keep Trump on the ballot.

    President Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump looks on during a meeting at the 80th session of the UN’s General Assembly (UNGA) at the United Nations headquarters on September 23, 2025, in New York City.  (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    After Trump was found liable in James’ civil fraud case in 2023 and ordered to pay $355 million fine, Hochul worked to calm other business leaders’ concerns that they could face similar trials, citing that Trump and “his behavior” set him apart. 

    “I think that this is really an extraordinary, unusual circumstance that the law-abiding and rule-following New Yorkers who are business people have nothing to worry about, because they’re very different than Donald Trump and his behavior,” Hochul said on radio show “The Cats Roundtable” in February 2024. 

    An appeals court threw out the monetary penalty in the case earlier in 2025. 

    Later that same year, Hochul celebrated that “no one is above the law” when Trump was found guilty in NY v. Trump on 34 counts of falsifying business records. 

    “Today’s verdict reaffirms that no one is above the law,” Hochul said in a statement in May 2024. “In preparation for a verdict in this trial, I directed my Administration to closely coordinate with local and federal law enforcement and we continue to monitor the situation. We are committed to protecting the safety of all New Yorkers and the integrity of our judicial system.”

    As the election came down to the wire in 2024, Hochul slammed Trump as a “fraud” and “philanderer” who lacked New York values, while pointing to the NY v. Trump case. 

    U.S. Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her running mate Minnesota Governor Tim Walz hold a campaign rally in Milwaukee

     Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her running mate Minnesota Governor Tim Walz hold a campaign rally in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. August 20, 2024.   (Marco Bello/Reuters)

    “Donald Trump was born a New Yorker but ended up a fraud, a philanderer, and a felon. He wasn’t raised with the New York values that I know,” Hochul declared during her Democratic National Convention speech in Chicago in 2024. “Trust me, America, if you think you’re tired of Donald Trump, talk to a New Yorker. We’ve had to deal with them for 78 long years, the fraud, the tax dodging, the sham university, the shady charities.”

    DOJ OPENS GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION INTO LETITIA JAMES TIED TO TRUMP CIVIL CASE

    Trump won the Republican primary in the 2024 election cycle, and swept the seven battleground states on Election Day, defeating then-Vice President Kamala Harris to succeed then-Preisdent Joe Biden in the Oval Office. 

    Hochul and James held a press conference the day after the election, and vowed to battle the Trump agenda while honoring the results of the election. 

    “I want to be very clear that while we honor the results of this election and will work with anyone who wants to be a partner in achieving the goals of our administration in our state, that does not mean we’ll accept an agenda from Washington that strips away the rights that New Yorkers have long enjoyed,” Hochul said on Nov. 6, 2024. 

    “We did not expect this result, but we are prepared to respond to this result,” James said during the same press conference. “And my office has been preparing for several months because we’ve been here before,” James said. “We faced this challenge before, and we used the rule of law to fight back. And we are prepared to fight back once again because, as the attorney general of this great state, it is my job to protect and defend the rights of New Yorkers and the rule of law. And I will not shrink from that responsibility.”

    Trump slammed the onslaught of court cases against him in recent years, denying wrongdoing and identifying them as attempts from his political foes as tools to prevent him from seeking and winning re-election. 

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    “They’re playing with the courts, as you know, they’ve been playing with the courts for four years. Probably got me more votes because I got the highest number of votes ever gotten by a Republican by far, actually, by a lot. And, you know, we had a great election, so I guess it didn’t work. But even to this day, they’re playing with the courts and they’re friendly judges that like to try and make everybody happy. … It’s called lawfare, it’s called weaponization of justice,” Trump said in January, just days before he was sworn back into office. 

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  • House Republicans show rare unity as shutdown drags into next week

    House Republicans show rare unity as shutdown drags into next week

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    House Republicans in battleground districts appear to be closing ranks as GOP leaders dig in on their government shutdown strategy, while the fiscal standoff shows no signs of slowing. 

    Eight House GOP lawmakers whose seats are being targeted by Democrats in 2026 spoke with Fox News Digital this week. And while some shared individual concerns, they were largely united in agreeing with Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., that Republicans should not renegotiate their federal funding proposal — and were confident that Americans are behind them.

    “The more people understand the math inside of the Senate, the more I would say Republicans are winning,” said Rep. Rob Bresnahan, R-Pa., who defeated a moderate Democrat for his seat last year.

    Rep. Jen Kiggans, R-Va., who also flipped her seat from blue to red, argued the results of the 2024 election show Americans “can see through a lot of the games that the Democrats have been playing.”

    JOHNSON RAISES STAKES ON SCHUMER AS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN BARRELS INTO WEEK 3

    Speaker Mike Johnson and his leadership team give a press conference

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, Rep. Lisa McClain, and Rep. Steve Scalise, left to right, during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Oct. 16, 2025.  (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “We’ve gotten to work with the demands of the American voters, and Democrats are still in disarray,” she said.

    Rep. Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., said, “It’s a simple math problem. And the Democrat Party grossly underestimated the American public’s ability to understand math.”

    For a House GOP conference that’s been plagued by historic levels of division in recent history — particularly over the issue of government funding — it has shown a notable display of unity amid the shutdown, with few exceptions.

    The shutdown is poised to roll into next week after most Senate Democrats voted to block the GOP’s bill for a tenth time. 

    Republicans put forward last month a seven-week extension of fiscal year (FY) 2025 funding levels, called a continuing resolution (CR), aimed at giving congressional negotiators more time to strike a long-term deal for FY2026.

    But Democrats in the House and Senate were infuriated by being sidelined in those talks. The majority of Democrats are refusing to accept any deal that does not include serious healthcare concessions, at least extending COVID-19 pandemic-era Obamacare subsidies that are set to expire at the end of this year.

    Several vulnerable Republicans who spoke with Fox News Digital pointed out they’re in favor of extending the Obamacare subsidies as well. Indeed, a majority of them are backers of a bipartisan bill to extend them for one year, led by Kiggans.

    “I think we would actually prefer to have … longer term than one year,” said Rep. Ryan Mackenzie, R-Pa.

    But Mackenzie also pointed out that House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., criticized the one-year bill, adding, “He already said ‘Absolutely not,’ so I don’t even know what their position is and what they’re asking for.”

    Jeffries walked those comments back somewhat a day later, telling reporters that Democrats were willing to look at any good-faith offer.

    Kiggans speaks into a microphone in DC

    Rep. Jen Kiggans speaks to reporters during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, July 14, 2023. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    Kiggans told Fox News Digital, “I care about that issue, certainly, you know, I had introduced that [Affordable Care Act] premium tax cuts extension.”

    She added that Obamacare, formally called the ACA, and reopening the government are “two different issues, though” that should be discussed separately.

    The House Republicans who spoke with Fox News Digital, while largely supportive of discussing Obamacare subsidy reforms and extensions, were united in refusing to entertain Democrats’ demands to come back to the negotiating table on federal funding. All maintained, in some form, that the House did its job in passing the CR on Sept. 19.

    “We have a clean CR that would fund all of the programs — all of the federal employees, keep everything up and running through Nov. 21st, so that we can finalize FY2026 appropriations and address issues like healthcare. But you don’t do it at the barrel of a gun,” said Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y.

    Lawler is one of three House Republicans who won in a district that President Donald Trump lost in 2024.

    SCREAMING MATCH ERUPTS BETWEEN HAKEEM JEFFRIES, MIKE LAWLER AS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN CHAOS CONTINUES

    “I think what the Democrats are doing here is creating a mess for the American people. And they’re not actually solving any of the problems,” he said.

    Mackenzie said, “It was a seven-week continuing resolution so that we could have time to have policy discussions on other issues that did need to be wrapped up by the end of the year. And we were on track to do that. And I think [Democrats] totally blew that process up.”

    “This is an unprecedented thing that Senate Democrats are doing, trying to add policy programs into the new continuity of funding bill,” Rep. Tom Kean, R-N.J., the most vulnerable Republican in the Garden State, also said.

    Both Lawler and Rep. Dave Valadao, R-Calif., warned that giving up a policy rider-free spending bill in favor of inserting partisan demands would create an unworkable new standard.

    Mike Lawler outside the Capitol Hill Club in D.C.

    Rep. Mike Lawler leaves Capitol Hill Club following a meeting of the House Republican Conference in Washington, March 4, 2025. (Tierney L. Cross/Getty Images)

    “Holding the government office is never a good strategy. And if it becomes a successful way of negotiating … it’ll set a bad precedent for governing moving forward,” Valadao said. “So this is an absolute no-go, should never be successful.”

    Lawler said, “The reality is, the moment you start giving in on a clean CR and start giving in to demands, this will continue in perpetuity. Every time there’s a government funding lapse, you’ll have a group of people demanding something, and it will turn into a fiasco.”

    Several of the battleground Republicans also praised Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., in the process.

    Valadao told Fox News Digital, “I think they’re doing a good job. At least all the calls I’ve been on, the conversations I’ve had with my colleagues and, again, folks in the district, they all seem pretty confident that we’re doing the right thing.”

    Lawler said Johnson had “handled it well,” while Bresnahan said, “I would say, at least with members, they’re, you know, keeping very fluid conversations. We have daily or at least biweekly calls here as to what the messaging needs to be and what the conversations are.”

    HOUSE PASSES TRUMP-BACKED PLAN TO AVERT GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN

    But there has been some dissent within the House GOP as the shutdown drags on.

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., has criticized House Republican leaders for not announcing a plan on extending the Obamacare subsidies.

    And Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., publicly ripped Johnson’s decision to keep the House out of session while the Senate considers the CR.

    “It is absolutely unacceptable to me and I think only serves further distrust,” Kiley told MSNBC on Wednesday.

    Notably, not all battleground House Republicans who spoke with Fox News Digital directly backed Johnson’s move — but none explicitly condemned it, either, and most blamed Senate Democrats for the holdup.

    “I’m kind of torn on that, because to come back and just be a part of the gimmicks that you see going on right now is not helpful,” Valadao said. “Holding the government hostage is what’s the problem here.”

    Chuck Schumer speaks to reporters

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks during a news conference. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

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    Kiggans, who said she’s lobbying for the House to vote on a standalone bill to pay both active duty and civilian members of the military, said, “I think we all want to get back to work. We know that we have work to do, but the ball’s in the court of the Senate Democrats and Chuck Schumer.”

    Others more directly backed the move, however.

    Kean told Fox News Digital that his staff were still busy in D.C. and in New Jersey trying to help constituents navigate the shutdown and other matters.

    “Any chance we can get back to our district, it’s always important that we listen to our constituents and hear their concerns,” Kean said. “Right now, I 100% support the decision.”

    Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Iowa, said it was “the right move.”

    “We should be with our district. I’m keeping all my district offices open despite nobody getting paid,” Nunn said. “Coming back and having a theatrical debate is less effective than having a real conversation about how to get the government back open.”

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  • GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York called Zohran Mamdani a ‘jihadist’

    GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York called Zohran Mamdani a ‘jihadist’

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    U.S. Rep. Elise Stefanik, an Empire State Republican, called Democratic Big Apple mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani a “jihadist.”

    “I call Zohran Mamdani a jihadist because he is. Zohran Mamdani is a raging antisemite. Mamdani is the definition of a jihadist as he supports Hamas terrorists which he did as recently as yesterday when he refused to call for Hamas terrorists to put down their arms – the same Hamas terrorist group that slaughtered civilians including New Yorkers on October 7, 2023,” the congresswoman claimed.

    Fox News Digital emailed Mamdani’s campaign to request a comment from the New York City mayoral candidate.

    HERE’S EVERYTHING YOU MISSED FROM ZOHRAN MAMDANI’S FIRST FOX NEWS INTERVIEW

    Left: Rep. Elise Stefanik; Right: New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani

    Left: U.S. Ambassador Designate to the United Nations Elise Stefanik during a Cabinet meeting at the White House on Feb. 26, 2025. in Washington, D.C.; Right: New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani visits “The Story With Martha MacCallum” at Fox News Channel Studios on Oct. 15, 2025, in New York City. (Left: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Right: John Lamparski/Getty Images)

    Fox News Channel’s Martha MacCallum asked Mamdani during an interview earlier this week whether he believes Hamas should lay down arms and depart from leadership in Gaza. 

    Mamdani called for ensuring peace between Israel and Palestine. 

    But MacCallum pressed him again on the issue.

    “But you won’t say that Hamas should lay down their arms and give up leadership in Gaza?” she asked.

    FOX NEWS POLL: MAMDANI MAINTAINS SIGNIFICANT LEAD IN NYC MAYORAL RACE

    “I don’t really have opinions about the future of Hamas and Israel beyond the question of justice and safety, and the fact that anything has to abide by international law,” he said.

    Democratic Rep. Laura Gillen of New York referred to Mamdani as “Pro-Hamas Zohran,” asserting that he “is unfit to hold any office in the United States.”

    But during a mayoral debate on Thursday when pressed about his comments and asked what he believes about Hamas, Mamdani, a New York State assemblymember, said, “Of course I believe that they should lay down their arms.”

    MAMDANI FLIP-FLOPS ON KEY HAMAS POSITION ONE DAY AFTER REFUSING TO CALL ON IT TO DISARM

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    Mamdani describes himself as a “Democratic Socialist” in the biography section of his X account.

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