Tag: administration
Trump urges Treasury Secretary Bessent to take Federal Reserve job
Trump urges Treasury Secretary Bessent to take Federal Reserve job
Trump nominates new CFPB director, but White House says agency is still closing
Trump nominates new CFPB director, but White House says agency is still closing
Trump hosts WH dinner with Saudi Crown Prince and soccer superstar Cristiano Ronaldo
President Donald Trump hosted a Tuesday night dinner with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and other notable figures in attendance.
Melania Trump and Usha Vance are making an early holiday visit with North Carolina military families
WASHINGTON (AP) Melania Trump and Usha Vance were headed out on their first trip together Wednesday to spend time.
The candidates for California governor on transgender athletes in school sports | Side-by-side comparison
The leading candidates for California governor weigh in on the state’s transgender student sports law: whether to keep it, overturn it, or let voters decide.
What to know about the F-35 fighter jet that Trump is selling to Saudi Arabia
President Donald Trump says he has agreed to sell the nation’s most advanced fighter jet to Saudi Arabia despite concerns that China could gain access to the plane’s vaunted American technology.
Massad Boulos’s Expanding Footprint: From the Middle East to Africa — Results in Under 12 Months
When Massad Boulos entered the Trump administration as the President’s Senior Adviser for Arab and African Affairs, he assumed responsibility for two of the world’s most politically complex regions.
Capitola | City to give updates on ongoing projects
The city of Capitola will host a special town hall meeting at the New Brighton Middle School performing arts center 6 p. m. Thursday, where staff will give updates on a number of ongoing projects, including redevelopment at Capitola Mall, the Bay Avenue Corridor and the Cliff Drive Resiliency Project.
WTI strengthens as traders balance surplus forecasts and geopolitical shifts
The post WTI strengthens as traders balance surplus forecasts and geopolitical shifts appeared com. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) Oil edges higher on Tuesday, trading around $60. 50 and up nearly 1. 35% on the day, despite ongoing worries about a widening supply surplus. Recent projections from the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) have warned that global Oil markets are on track for a period of oversupply, with non-OPEC output growth and softer consumption expected to weigh on balances into early 2026. At the same time, geopolitical pressure has eased slightly after Russia’s Novorossiysk export operations resumed, removing part of the risk premium that had temporarily supported crude following last week’s disruption. Meanwhile, traders are closely watching the next round of US sanctions targeting Russian oil majors Rosneft and Lukoil, which are scheduled to take effect on November 21. US President Donald Trump has signaled he is prepared to sign legislation imposing broader sanctions on Russia, provided he retains final decision-making authority over any such measures. He added that it was “OK with me” that Republicans are drafting a bill aimed at countries that continue doing business with Moscow, citing Russia’s failure to show meaningful progress toward a Ukraine peace agreement. From a technical perspective, WTI continues to trade within a well-defined descending channel on the daily chart. The broader trend remains tilted to the downside as long as the channel’s upper boundary stays intact. Prices have now broken above the 21-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) near $59. 97, offering a mild improvement in near-term momentum. On the upside, the $61. 00-$61. 50 region acts as the first major barrier. This zone aligns with the descending channel’s upper trendline and a former horizontal support now acting as resistance, an area that has repeatedly capped gains since late October. A daily close above this region would be the first sign of a structural shift, opening.
Agents mock Trump’s FBI chief behind his back for ‘hiding all the Epstein files’: report
The FBI and the Department of Justice (DOJ) are struggling to quash conspiracies that their current leaders used to espouse, according to a Tuesday report in CNN. The first of these involves the ongoing saga surrounding deceased child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, whose recently published emails link President Donald Trump directly to him. When FBI Director Kash Patel attempted to tout what he thought was a major win for the administration on drug crackdowns last week, he was overshadowed by Epstein.”For Patel and other FBI and Justice officials, the first 10 months in office have featured a series of headaches, with theories once peddled by the president’s loyal supporters-turned-government officials getting in the way of their new priorities,” CNN reports. In 2023, Patel told far-right podcaster Benny Johnson the reason the files were not released was “Simple, because of who’s on that list.”In the months since Attorney General Pam Bondi said there was no Epstein list, “Bondi, Patel, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino, and other Trump administration officials have sought to close the books on Epstein only to be confronted by the reality that the conspiracies they fueled won’t allow them to,” CNN says. Patel has only made things worse, they write, noting that “as director, Patel has told Congress the FBI went through all investigative materials related to Epstein and found no evidence of a grand conspiracy of Epstein trafficking women to the wealthy and elite despite his previous support of the idea.”In June, Patel told podcaster Joe Rogan that “we’re not gonna re-victimize women. We’re not going to put that s– back out there. It’s not happening, because he wins . You want to hate me for it, fine.”Bongino also fanned the conspiracy flames on his own podcast in May, 2024, when he said, “What the hell are they hiding with Jeffrey Epstein?”Another conspiracy theory that has been resurrected to the annoyance of Justice Department officials,” is the one involving the identity of the person who planted pipe bombs outside the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee offices the night before the January 6, 2021 Capitol insurrection. Weeks before he took his position in the second Trump administration, Bongino said on his podcast, “Folks, this guy was an insider. This was an inside job. And it is the biggest scandal in FBI history,” and on Saturday, right wing media outlet The Blaze thought for sure they had the suspect until their theory was quickly debunked.”Soon, the FBI and Bongino himself were forced to defend the agency from the same type of allegations the deputy director had once made,” CNN writes. This has angered the MAGA base, including former FBI agent and right-wing podcast host Kyle Seraphin, who angrily posted on X Sunday following Patel’s claims “The stated goal of the account: Combating ‘lies, smears and falsehoods from the fake news and others seeking to undermine our work and national security.'”That account has struggled to do just that, CNN says, attempting in its second post to defend the FBI against “claims it had lied, this time from right-wing media star Tucker Carlson, who claimed the FBI had lied about Donald Trump’s would-be assassins’ online presence.”“This FBI has never said Thomas Crooks had no online footprint. Ever,” the FBI posted about the man who shot Trump at a rally last summer and killed an attendee. Patel sent out his own post following that one, saying, “The investigation, conducted by over 480 FBI employees, revealed Crooks had limited online and in person interactions, planned and conducted the attack alone, and did not leak or share his intent to engage in the attack with anyone.”CNN also notes how Patel used to rail against the so-called ‘deep state’ and is now being mocked for becoming part of it, in the wake of recent firings in the bureau.”In recent days, FBI agents have been sharing with each other an AI generated music video that pokes fun at Patel for ‘hiding all the Epstein files,’ among other public missteps by the director, sources inside the agency told CNN.”.
The New York Times
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