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Three Big Things

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  • Trump Ousts Attorney General Pam Bondi

    President Trump ousted Attorney General Pam Bondi, ending a yearlong tenure atop the Justice Department marked by failed efforts to prosecute his favored targets and a view by the president and his advisers that she mismanaged the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.

    “Pam Bondi is a Great American Patriot and a loyal friend, who faithfully served as my Attorney General over the past year,” Trump wrote on social media on Thursday afternoon. The president said Bondi would soon transition to a “much needed and important new job in the private sector.” He didn’t provide details on her new job.

    Bondi said in a statement that she would work over the next month to transition the attorney general’s office to Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, who will take over on an acting basis, before moving to her new role.

    “Leading President Trump’s historic and highly successful efforts to make America safer and more secure has been the honor of a lifetime, and easily the most consequential first year of the Department of Justice in American history,” she wrote. Bondi didn’t provide details about her new role, but said she was “thrilled” about it and would “continue fighting for President Trump and this Administration.”

    Blanche, a former personal lawyer for Trump who was confirmed last year to the second-ranking Justice Department role, said in a social-media post: “Pam Bondi led this Department with strength and conviction and I’m grateful for her leadership and friendship.”

    Trump is considering nominating Lee Zeldin, head of the Environmental Protection Agency, as her successor, although no final decision has been made, according to people familiar with the matter.

    Bondi presided over a turbulent period as she worked to make the Justice Department—an agency that historically had operated independently of presidential influence—deliver on Trump’s priorities. She took steps that his first-term attorneys general had refused to take, including attempting to prosecute his perceived enemies and hunting for evidence that he beat former President Joe Biden in the 2020 election.

    Bondi oversaw the firings and forced departures of scores of prosecutors and other employees who investigated Trump and his allies in recent years. She even placed a large banner of Trump’s face on the outside of the Justice Department.

    Trump has nevertheless privately complained for months about her, describing her as weak and ineffective and saying she had moved too slowly to bring criminal cases against those he saw as adversaries.

    In September, Trump singled out James Comey, the former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and New York Attorney General Letitia James as targets for prosecution in a social-media post he intended as a private message to Bondi pressuring her to bring cases. “We can’t delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation and credibility,” Trump wrote.

    Days later, the Justice Department secured an indictment of Comey charging him with obstruction and lying to Congress. The department later brought charges against James. A federal judge dismissed both cases last year after ruling that the Trump-appointed prosecutor behind them was unlawfully installed in the role.

    Trump blamed Bondi’s handling of FBI files related to Epstein, the convicted sex offender, for creating months of political and personal headaches for him. Facing sustained bipartisan criticism, Bondi was subpoenaed by the Republican-led House Oversight Committee last month to sit for a closed-door deposition in April.

    The president weighed firing her in January but ultimately was persuaded not to do so, people familiar with the matter said.

    Bondi, 60 years old, is the second cabinet secretary Trump has fired in recent weeks; he ousted former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem in early March.


    READ MORE: Trump Ousts Pam Bondi as U.S. Attorney General - WSJ

  • GOP rails against 's--- sandwich' deal as all eyes turn to House to end DHS shutdown

    The House is primed to end the record-breaking Homeland Security shutdown, but Republicans are still fuming over a "s--- sandwich" deal from the Senate. 

    The Senate again advanced its partial Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill on Thursday after being derailed by a House GOP rebellion. The frustration among House Republicans hasn’t gone anywhere, however, with lawmakers railing against House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., during a members-only call on Thursday afternoon.

    The simmering anger comes after Johnson made a swift reversal, spurred by President Donald Trump, and backed Senate Majority Leader John Thune’s, R-S.D., on a two-track approach Wednesday that would pass the Senate’s partial DHS bill while funding Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in a forthcoming party-line reconciliation package.

    A senior GOP aide told Fox News Digital that House Republicans wanted to see action from their Senate counterparts on reconciliation and were frustrated with how the upper chamber handled the DHS deal, which the source said amounted to a "s--- sandwich."

    House Republicans are incensed at the Senate plan, which carves out funding for ICE and CBP. Still, the bill is expected to pass with bipartisan support.

    "People are mad at Johnson," one source familiar with the call told Fox News.

    But for now, House Republicans are in no hurry to return to Washington, D.C., to end the 48-day shutdown. The House is next scheduled to return on April 14. A source familiar with the call told Fox News Digital that leadership is not expected to ask members to return to Washington early to vote on the measure. 

    A source told Fox News that there was "a lot of frustration" with the situation.

    "Does feel like whiplash," the source said.

    "Not happy," another person familiar with the call said. "Not willing to vote for anything that defunds law enforcement absent tangible action from Senate. Thune should call Senate back today."

    Some House Republicans argued the chamber must fund the president’s immigration and border security efforts through reconciliation before considering the Senate bill — despite the budget reconciliation process expected to take months.

    This viewpoint was expressed by a broad group within the conference, not just the conservative flank, according to a source familiar with the call.

    If Johnson proceeded first with the Senate bill, conservative opposition could determine how he brings the legislation to the floor. In the event he lacks conference-wide support for the upper chamber’s partial DHS bill, he could be forced to call up the Senate bill under suspension of House rules.

    That strategy — requiring a two-thirds majority to pass — risks upsetting conservatives if the DHS bill relies on Democratic votes to clear the chamber.

    House lawmakers could have used the same fast-track process Thursday to pass the DHS bill that was done in the Senate, but opted not to. 

    Thune said Thursday that he didn’t know when the House would move on the bill, but noted that when they did, Republicans would begin a sprint to complete the budget reconciliation process.

    "My assumption is, at some point, hopefully they'll move it," Thune said. "And you know, [with] the understanding that we're going to come behind it with the Recon bill. I mean, I think this whole — where we are is just a regrettable place." 

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer's, D-N.Y., demanded that the House GOP immediately take up the bill and accused them of now owning "the longest government shutdown in history." 

    "The deep division and dysfunction among House Republicans is needlessly extending the DHS shutdown and hurting federal workers who are missing another paycheck," Schumer said. "The Senate did its work twice to fund key parts of DHS without funding the lawlessness of ICE and Border Patrol."

    But Trump has already teed up a counter, and plans to pay DHS employees through an executive order.

    "Because the Democrats are fully and 100% committed to the Radical Left Policy of Open Borders and Zero Immigration Enforcement (which will hopefully cost them dearly in the Midterms!), allowing Murderers and Criminals of all types into our Country, totally unchecked and unvetted, I will soon sign an order to pay ALL of the incredible employees at the Department of Homeland Security," Trump said on Truth Social.



    Read More : House Republicans furious at Johnson over DHS shutdown, sources say | Fox News

  • Ivey home from hospital, signs PSC bill

    Gov. Kay Ivey returned home Thursday after a medical procedure and two-night hospital stay, her office said.

    “Gov. Kay Ivey has returned back to the Governor’s Mansion following her successful procedure at Baptist Medical Center South,” spokeswoman Gina Maiola said Thursday afternoon.

    Ivey’s office previously said she’d needed a minor procedure to remove fluid in her lung.

    “The fluid that previously pressed against her lung has been 100% percent removed and cleared, and she will have no short or long-term challenges related to this issue,” Maiola said in the update.

    “Throughout her two-night stay, she remained engaged in the ongoing legislative process, as well as other regular business and current events.

    “… She plans to work from the Mansion (Thursday) afternoon and through the weekend and looks forward to being back at the Capitol next week.”

    Lawmakers return to Montgomery Tuesday for the final three days of this legislative session, likely sending dozens of bills to Ivey’s office for her signature.

    On Thursday, she signed House Bill 475 to overhaul the state’s Public Service Commission. It expands the commission from three to seven elected members, but Ivey will make four initial appointments. She’ll also appoint an energy secretary, a new cabinet position created in the bill.

    “The Alabama Legislature passed HB475 to put a freeze on electric rates and to give the people of Alabama broader representation on the Public Service Commission. I have signed the bill and will look forward to building on my record of strong appointments to the PSC. Alabama is a top 10 state when it comes to cost of living, and we are the number one state for plain affordability. As I have said before, for Alabama to remain the best state to live, work and raise a family, we have to grow the state, while keeping our cost of living low.”


    Ivey home from hospital, signs PSC bill - Alabama Daily News

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