|
(Second column, 6th story, link)
Related stories: MAGA vs. MAGA: Who's Winning the Right Wing Media Meltdown? SHOCK: Man who was son's caretaker denied final goodbye... Welcome to the Jade Helm Presidency... Conservatives once panicked about invasion plot. Now they're cheering it...
Drudge Report Feed needs your support! Become a Patron
|
|
Bill Clinton agreed to an interview he had long resisted, but Representative James Comer, the Oversight Committee chairman, signaled he would go forward with holding the former president in contempt.
|
|
(Second column, 3rd story, link)
Related stories: Grenell drama spiral...
Drudge Report Feed needs your support! Become a Patron
|
|
House Democrats have indicated privately that they do not plan to support the plan, leaving Republicans to go it alone.
|
|
(Second column, 8th story, link)
Related stories: After His Dem Victory in TX, New Working-Class Star Rises... Gun groups warn Republicans vulnerable...
|
|
The Justice Department on Friday released an additional 3 million pages of documents related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The Trump administration says it was the final release of Epstein files, even though some 2 million more documents remain unreleased. The latest batch reveals new details about Epstein's connections to the rich and powerful, including Hollywood figures, tech billionaires, public officials and more. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said it is unlikely anyone else would be prosecuted.
Attorney Arick Fudali, who represents 11 Epstein survivors, says the release of the files has been a "perfect storm" of "incompetency and an active cover-up" by the Trump administration. "It's so mind-boggling, because they're withholding documents that they shouldn't be withholding … but, on the other hand, they're showing documents that they shouldn't be showing because they contain unredacted names of survivors," says Fudali.
Investigative journalist Vicky Ward, who has covered the Epstein case for many years, says despite the flawed release of the files, they continue to shine light on a world of elite impunity and excess. "We just see over and over again in these documents, there's just one big billionaires boys club that treated women like objects," says Ward.
|
|
(Second column, 5th story, link)
Related stories: Bundy slams ICE as major schism tears apart militants... SHOCK: Man who was son's caretaker denied final goodbye... Welcome to the Jade Helm Presidency... Conservatives once panicked about invasion plot. Now they're cheering it...
|
|
(Third column, 4th story, link)
Drudge Report Feed needs your support! Become a Patron
|
|
The Democratic Party on the national level has a mere fraction of what Republicans have heading into the 2026 midterms. Big donors like Elon Musk are back, too.
|
|
The investment, worth a reported $500 million, gave Emirati-backed investors a 49 percent stake in World Liberty Financial, a Trump crypto company.
|
|
(Second column, 7th story, link)
Related stories: New memo gives deportation officers MORE leeway to conduct warrantless arrests... Feds use tear gas on Portland protesters, including children... Claim that detainee shattered skull running into wall triggers tension at hospital... Demonstrators in Milan protest unit at Winter Olympics, criticizing 'creeping fascism'...
Drudge Report Feed needs your support! Become a Patron
|
|
Ventures launched by the Trump family since Donald Trump's reelection have generated at least $4 billion in proceeds and paper wealth for the Trump family. With investments across sectors like real estate, hospitality, media, cryptocurrency and more, the Trumps are "increasingly integrating their business empire" into the wider U.S. economy, says David Uberti, who has been reporting on the family's self-enrichment for The Wall Street Journal. The coupling of Trump's economic and political influence is raising major questions about conflicts of interest. "You have all of these different business interests in different areas in which the government regulates," and this "proximity to power may help along some of these deals and the valuations at which they're made."
We look at the Trumps' cryptocurrency venture World Liberty Financial and the Trump Organization's planned $6 billion merger with a firm hoping to build a nuclear fusion plant to power AI data centers with Uberti, who says such "very speculative, highly risky corners of financial markets" are key to the family's investment strategy.
|
|