12/2/24 EditionExclusive with incoming White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, the latest problem at the CFPB, a pricey recount Democrats lost, op-eds from Senator Jack Johnson, Bonnie Glick, and more!
December 2, 2024In this edition
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Exclusive with incoming White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, the latest problem at the CFPB, a pricey recount Democrats lost, op-eds from Senator Jack Johnson, Bonnie Glick, and more!Interview: Incoming White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt: “The next four years are going to be the most transformative time in our nation's history”by Matthew Foldi The youngest person ever to be named White House Press Secretary, 27-year-old Karoline Leavitt is no stranger to making history. During the 2022 cycle, she was one of the Republican Party’s youngest nominees for Congress. In an interview with the Washington Reporter, Donald Trump’s incoming press secretary said that the president’s historic 2024 campaign was only the beginning of what she predicts will be four years of victories. “The next four years are going to be the most transformative time in our nation's history,” she said. “We have the Senate, we have the House, and President Trump is going to take real bold action to make a monumental change for our country and for generations to come.” During Trump’s first term, Leavitt worked with then-Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany, “help[ing] her prepare for many of her briefings,” she said. Since Trump announced Leavitt as his press secretary, she’s been watching tape like an NFL player. “I've gone back and watched a lot of C-Span briefings dating back to Dana Perino’s time in the Bush White House,” Leavitt said. “Dana and Ari Fleischer, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, were great. And of course, Kayleigh McEnany [was great].” “What I've learned in talking to them and watching their past briefings is that you have to be yourself, you have to be honest, and know that your job is to relay the president's message,” she added. “It's not about me, it's about President Trump and speaking on his behalf and relaying what he wants to say and what the White House is doing directly to the American people.” Heard on the Hill
Exclusive: CFPB Director invested in asset manager he singled out for criticismby Matthew Foldi Chopra, the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and a board member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), was under fire for prejudging Vanguard, the Washington Reporter previously reported last month. These revelations, confirmed by Chopra’s latest financial disclosure forms obtained by the Reporter, come as investors such as Elon Musk and Marc Andreessen have accused the CFPB of “debanking” political opponents. “My partner, Ben’s father, has been debanked…for having the wrong politics,” Andreessen said on Joe Rogan’s podcast. “For saying ‘unacceptable things’ under current banking regulations.” “Time to go back to a merit-based system”: Congress praises Walmart’s massive DEI rollbackby Matthew Foldi The retail giant announced late last month that it is pulling out of a gay rights index, not renewing a commitment for a racial equity center, and abandoning preferential treatment to certain groups when it determines its suppliers. It is “time to go back to a merit-based system,” Rep. Claudia Tenney (R., N.Y.) told the Washington Reporter. Incoming members of Congress are eager to highlight the importance of merit in hiring. “The only way organizations will survive, be it companies or governments, in this increasingly competitive world is to hire and fire based on merit,” Mike Haridopolos said. “Walmart has clearly recognized this. Anything short of this will result in subpar organizations who are not putting their best and brightest positions of leadership.” Walmart’s DEI rollback marks a shift by many in corporate America against the rise in wokeness, which spiked in 2020. Lowe’s, Harley Davidson, and Tractor Supply Co. are other mega corporations that scaled back their woke capitalism approaches in 2024. Exclusive: Democrat-requested House recount costs taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars; Republicans stopped “illegal recount method”by Matthew Foldi Miller-Meeks faced a spirited rematch from failed Democratic candidate and former engineering intern Christina Bohannan, who came within several hundred votes of unseating Miller-Meeks this cycle, after losing by over 20,000 votes in 2022. However, Bohannan’s team attempted to employ a series of legally questionable moves which were defeated by Miller-Meeks’s campaign. A message from our sponsor.
Scoop: NRCC launches "largest ballot curing effort in California history"by Matthew Foldi Op-Ed: Sen. Jack Johnson: Why Tennessee is taking our fight to protect children all the way to the Supreme Courtby Sen. Jack Johnson One of the most striking developments in 2024 is how far left the Democratic Party has shifted. In their vision for America, men can identify as women, women as men, men can compete in women’s sports, and children can undergo permanent, irreversible surgeries under the guise of “gender affirming care.” Op-Ed: Daniel Turner: Three immediate ways for the National Energy Council to restore American energy dominanceby Daniel Turner President-elect Donald Trump’s “big three” energy picks at the Department of Interior (DOI) with Doug Burgum, at the Department of Energy (DOE) with Chris Wright, and at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) with Lee Zeldin, combined with the creation of a National Energy Council, have America poised for not only an energy renaissance, but for a return to the dominance of his first administration. The announcements are in line with the voices of voters, who spoke with a loud voice against high prices for food and goods, which have been exacerbated by Biden-era policies aimed at curtailing traditional energy. When the Energy Council convenes in January, there are three immediate actions to increase productions and to reduce prices. Op-Ed: Nicki Neily: Education Secretary Linda McMahon is a win for parentsby Nicki Neily President Donald Trump’s nomination of former Small Business Administration (SBA) Administrator Linda McMahon to serve as America’s next Secretary of Education caught many in Washington, D.C. by surprise, given her nontraditional background. But make no mistake — McMahon’s skill set is sorely needed to turn around a failing department, and American families are going to benefit enormously. As the steward of a wildly successful multinational business, McMahon demonstrated that she has the acumen to identify a customer base and deliver a high-quality product. Op-Ed: Josh Teigen and Bonnie Glick: We must unleash American energy to secure our alliancesby Josh Teigen and Bonnie Glick There’s an old expression: Where you stand depends on where you sit. This plays out in international affairs quite explicitly in the area of natural resources, especially with oil and gas as countries seek to power the future while ensuring reliable supplies and suppliers. Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, America’s natural gas exports to Europe have skyrocketed. The following year, in 2023, the U.S. was the world’s largest liquefied natural gas (LNG) exporter in the world, with Russian exports at roughly one-third the American level. The more gas the U.S. exports to compete with our adversaries, the lower the global prices for allies’s imports will be. Op-Ed: Doug Blair: President Joe Biden’s pardon of his son caps a pathetic career with another broken promiseby Doug Blair Late last night, President Joe Biden issued a “full and unconditional pardon” for his son Hunter Biden, illustrating once again why he will go down as one of the most corrupt presidents in American history and the biggest liar to sit at the Resolute Desk. What we’re reading
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