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Haley Defeats Trump In DC Republican Primary

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Former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley has secured her first victory in the Washington, D.C. Republican presidential primary contest

Haley garnered 1,274 votes to formerย President Trumpโ€™sย 676 with all precincts reporting, according to Decision Desk HQ.

The win for the former United Nations ambassador breaks a streak of more than a half dozen victories for Trump to start out the GOP contests for the nomination.ย 

Despite trailing behind former President Trump throughout the race Haley has pledged to remain in the race at least until Super Tuesday when more than a dozen states will vote.

the win in the winner-take-all D.C. primary will give her all of its 19 delegates. Voting in the District took place across three days from Friday to Sunday.ย 

Candidates need at least 1,215 delegates to mathematically clinch the Republican nomination.ย 

BBC Chiefs Quit After Accusations Of Deep-Rooted Bias

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The White House, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

LONDON โ€” The BBCโ€™s top two executives are stepping down amid mounting pressure over editorial credibility, shaking confidence in the U.K.โ€™s national broadcaster just as it faces critical decisions on funding and governance.

On Sunday, BBC Director-General Tim Davie and BBC News chief Deborah Turness announced their resignations. The dual departure follows weeks of mounting backlash over allegations of systemic bias in the networkโ€™s coverage โ€” from President Donald Trump and the war in Gaza to debates over transgender rights.

Pressure Built After Leaked Memo

The tipping point came with a leaked internal memo from former BBC adviser Michael Prescott. The memo accused the broadcaster of โ€œserious and systemic biasโ€ across a range of politically charged topics.

Chief among them: an episode of Panorama that aired selectively edited footage of Trumpโ€™s Jan. 6, 2021, speech. Critics said the edits gave the false impression that Trump directly called on supporters to storm the U.S. Capitol. The full version of the speech did not support that claim.

Controversy also surrounded the BBCโ€™s coverage of the Gaza conflict. Accusations included overreliance on anti-Israel voices, sourcing from extremists on its Arabic service, and distorted portrayals of children and wartime suffering.

In a separate thread of concern, BBC staff raised red flags over the networkโ€™s handling of trans-related issues, arguing its reporting often lacked balance and downplayed the contested nature of the debates.

Davie and Turness Respond

In a message to BBC staff, Davie acknowledged the broadcasterโ€™s imperfections.

โ€œLike all public organisations, the BBC is not perfect,โ€ he wrote. โ€œWhile not being the only reason, the current debate around BBC News has understandably contributed to my decision.โ€

Turness, while taking responsibility for the news division, rejected claims of structural bias.

โ€œWhile mistakes have been made,โ€ she wrote, โ€œI want to be absolutely clear: recent allegations that BBC News is institutionally biased are wrong.โ€

BBC Chairman Samir Shah called it a โ€œsad day,โ€ affirming the boardโ€™s support for Davie but conceding the strain he had been under.

A Deeper Governance Crisis

The BBC, funded by the public through license fees, is required by charter to deliver impartial journalism. The resignations expose a deeper institutional crisis at a time when the broadcasterโ€™s mandate and funding model are under review.

The current Royal Charter is set to expire in 2027. Debates about the future of the license fee, the role of public media, and political interference are already in motion. The timing of this leadership vacuum could have significant downstream effects.

What Comes Next

The BBC board now faces the task of finding replacements for two of its most senior posts. The outcome will shape the editorial tone and strategic direction of the broadcaster for years to come.

Internal reviews are expected, especially around how the Panorama episode was handled and whether internal warnings were ignored. Broader investigations may follow, probing the extent of bias across the BBCโ€™s output.

In the near term, the corporation faces reputational damage. With over 100 BBC employees and 200 industry professionals having signed an open letter last year criticizing Gaza coverage, pressure is mounting not just from the public but also from within.

Regulators and government officials may push for increased oversight, new editorial controls, or funding reforms as part of the charter renewal debate.

Looking Ahead

Davie, who took over in 2020, exits during one of the BBCโ€™s most fraught moments in recent history. His successor will inherit a broadcaster under siege โ€” from all sides โ€” and with a shrinking window to restore public trust before the next charter review begins in earnest.

What happens next at the BBC wonโ€™t just shape a news organization โ€” it will help define the future of public broadcasting in a divided media landscape.

DeSantis Dismisses Trump Running Mate Speculation

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Ron DeSantis via Gage Skidmore Flickr

Ron DeSantis has his eyes on the prize.

The Florida governor and White House contender said he is not interested in becoming Donald Trump’s running mate if given the chance.

โ€œI donโ€™t think so. Iโ€™m not a No. 2 guy,โ€ DeSantis said on the โ€œWisconsin Right Nowโ€ radio show,ย NBC News reported.

DeSantis said he would opt to stay in his governorship over joining Trumpโ€™s ticket, adding that the vice presidency โ€œdoesnโ€™t really have any authority.โ€

When asked whom he would consider signing on as a running mate, the Sunshine State governor said โ€œitโ€™s a little bit presumptuous to be doing that at this stage,โ€ adding that heโ€™s focused on winning the early primaries before delving deep into his search for vice president.

The Florida governor is trailing Trump in the 2024 GOP primary race by nearly 30 points nationally, according to aย FiveThirtyEight poll.

Recently, a pro-DeSantis spokesperson told Mediaite he has serious concerns about the Florida Governor’s ability to take on Trump.

โ€œRight now in national polling we are way behind, Iโ€™ll be the first to admit that,โ€ said Cortes. โ€œI believe in being blunt and honest. Itโ€™s an uphill battle but clearly Donald Trump is the runaway frontrunner.โ€

He added that DeSantisโ€™ campaign was the โ€œclear underdog,โ€ and added that in the first four primary states, โ€œwhichย matter tremendously, polls are a lot tighter, we are still clearly down. Weโ€™re down double digits, we have work to do.โ€

Who do you think the winning Republican ticket is? Tell us in the comments below!

Report: Nancy Pelosi Not Attending Trump Inauguration

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Gage Skidmore Flickr

A significant snub…

Former Speakerย Nancy Pelosiย (D-Calif.) will not be attendingย President-elect Trumpโ€™sย inauguration on Monday, her spokesperson confirmed to The Hill.

Pelosiโ€™s spokesperson did not share a reason for the former Democrat leader skipping the Monday event. The former Speaker attended Trumpโ€™s first inauguration in 2017.

Senior leaders of both parties typically attend presidential inaugurations, though Trump skippedย President Bidenโ€™sย inaugural event in 2021.

Former first ladyย Michelle Obamaย alsoย wonโ€™t be attending Trumpโ€™s second inauguration, though former President Obama will attend

News of Pelosi not attending was first reported byย ABC News.

This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.

Fox News Host Mark Levin Skewers Trump Middle East Visit

Fox News host Mark Levin had a lot to say about President Trump’s current visit to the Middle East…

Without mentioning President Trump by name, Levin was remarkably critical of the commander-in-chief, taking to social media to blast Saudi Arabia for playing a โ€œsignificant role on the 9/11 slaughter of our people.โ€ He also condemned Qatar for having โ€œprotected the leader of the 9/11 attack from the FBI, before he was able to launch his war on America that killed our people.โ€

Levin posted on X:

Saudi Arabia played a significant role on the 9/11 slaughter of our people. I didnโ€™t hear their Crown Prince even apologize once yesterday for what they did to us. And I know the 9/11 families are reeling from this.

And Qatar protected the leader of the 9/11 attack from the FBI, before he was able to launch his war on America that killed our people. The debate about whether the plane is a legal gift is beside the point. Qatar is a terrorist regime that has murdered Americans.

I cannot let bygones be bygones and those Americans who suffered the consequences of what these monarchies did cannot either. I canโ€™t stop thinking about all the innocent people who went to work that day, and were on those planes, and all the firefighters and police officers who died horrible deaths.

As for Iran, if they get a nuclear weapon thatโ€™s on our generation. And our country will suffer the horrible consequences. These are terrorists. They donโ€™t think like us and they donโ€™t love life like us. We must have the guts and wisdom to protect ourselves.

In a separate post, Levin praised Trump, but not without dinging him for using โ€œlines used by the Soros-Koch isolationist crowd about neocons and interventionistsโ€ in his speech to the Saudis. Levin linked to a Jewish Insider article about the speech and noted via X:

Isolationism or globalism? Or both?

Actually, POTUSโ€™s speech included some of the lines used by the Soros-Koch isolationist crowd about neocons and interventionists, but the irony is that it was given in the context of a globalist outreach effort to make economic and military deals with and between Middle East monarchies/dictatorships and the biggest of Americaโ€™s globalists/internationalists/corporatists. We donโ€™t know the details but if theyโ€™re great deals for we, the people, thatโ€™s wonderful. I truly believe the President is THE best at making GREAT deals. Nonetheless, this looks like globalism wrapped in isolationist language.

Levin’s comments come as President Trump faces scrutiny overย his decision toย accept Qatarโ€™s gift of a luxurious $400 million โ€œflying palaceโ€ to serve as Air Force One. (RELATED: Trump Announces Plan To Drop Sanctions On Syria)

The prospect has drawnย bipartisan pushback, which Trump has met with indifference.ย 

“[The Qataris] said to me, ‘we would like to, in effect, we would like to make a gift. You’ve done so many things. and we’d like to make you a gift to the Defense Department,’ which is where it’s going. and I said, ‘Well, that’s nice.’ Now, some people say, ‘Oh, you shouldn’t accept gifts for the country.’ My attitude is, why wouldn’t I accept the gift? We’re giving to everybody else, why wouldn’t I accept a gift?” Trump explained to Fox News’ Sean Hannity on Tuesdsay. 

U.S. relations with Doha have come a long way since 2017, when Trump accused Qatar of harboring terrorism: “The nation of Qatar, unfortunately, has historically been a funder of terrorism at a very high level,” Trump said at the time. 

From there, Qatar became a major non-NATO ally to the U.S. in 2022 under President Biden and is home to Al Udeid Air Base, one of the U.S.โ€™ largest Middle East bases and a key hub for U.S. Central Command operations. 

“Qatar is not, in my opinion, a great ally. I mean, they support Hamas. So what I’m worried about is the safety of the president,” Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) told reporters on Tuesday.

The Constitution states that accepting a gift from an overseas power requires congressional approval. However, Trump has not requested permission to receive the plane, an offering made months after his family business agreed to develop a multi-billion dollar golf course in the Middle Eastern country.ย 

Republican Senator Signals He Won’t Support Vance In 2028

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Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) made clear Sunday on ABC Newsโ€™s This Week that he does not see Vice President JD Vance as someone he would support in a hypothetical 2028 presidential bid, underscoring deep philosophical differences over trade and the future direction of the GOP.

When asked whether he views Vance โ€” widely viewed within GOP circles as a leading contender to carry the Republican banner after President Donald Trump โ€” as the so-called heir apparent, Paul was direct about the limits of their alignment.

โ€œI think there needs to be representatives in the Republican Party who still believe international trade is good, who still believe in free market capitalism, who still believe in low taxes,โ€ Paul said, emphasizing his long-standing libertarian philosophy.

Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons

Pressed on whether that description fits Vance, Paul answered, โ€œNo.โ€

Paul lamented what he sees as a shift in GOP economic thinking โ€” away from traditional free-market conservatism toward protectionist policies that embrace tariffs.

โ€œIt used to separate conservatives and liberals that conservatives thought it was a spending problem โ€” we didnโ€™t want less revenue, we wanted less spending,โ€ he said.
โ€œBut now all these pro-tariff protectionists, they love taxes. And so they tax, tax, tax, and then they brag about all the revenue coming in. That has never been a conservative position.โ€

Paul said he intends to continue championing a free-market, low-tax wing of the party and will let time โ€” and voters โ€” determine where GOP leadership settles.


Context: Trump, Vance, and a Fractured GOP

Vanceโ€™s position as a prominent Trump loyalist โ€” often touted by MAGA-aligned activists as the next leader of the movement โ€” stands in contrast to Paulโ€™s more classical libertarian outlook. Trump and Vance have worked closely throughout the administration, and Trump himself has suggested both Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio would make strong contenders in 2028, even as speculation swirls about Trumpโ€™s own future political plans.

Paul and Vanceโ€™s disagreements arenโ€™t limited to trade. Earlier in 2025, Paul publicly criticized Vanceโ€™s support for a controversial U.S. military strike on an alleged Venezuelan drug-smuggling vessel โ€” going so far as to call the actions Vance defended โ€œdespicable and thoughtlessโ€ for celebrating lethal force without due process. This public spar highlights deeper philosophical divides between the libertarian wing of the party and its more interventionist or nationalist elements.

Those tensions reflect a broader conversation within the GOP about its core principles โ€” from foreign policy to economic strategy โ€” as the party prepares for post-Trump leadership.


Erika Kirk Endorses Vance for 2028

Adding to the political backdrop, Erika Kirk โ€” the widow of conservative activist and Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk and the organizationโ€™s CEO โ€” officially endorsed Vice President Vance for president in 2028 during the groupโ€™s annual AmericaFest conference in Phoenix.

Kirk, speaking to thousands of activists, pledged Turning Pointโ€™s powerful grassroots support and framed Vance as a continuation of her husbandโ€™s conservative legacy:

โ€œWe are going to get my husbandโ€™s friend JD Vance elected for 48 in the most resounding way possible.โ€

Her endorsement โ€” and Turning Pointโ€™s mobilization capacity on campuses and with younger conservatives โ€” could be a significant boost in the early stages of a national campaign, even though Vance has not yet announced a formal campaign bid

Trump Snub? GOP Incumbents Accused of ‘Borrowing’ President’s Support to Survive Brutal Primaries

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President Donald Trump gestures to the crowd after delivering remarks at the House GOP Member Retreat, Tuesday, January 6, 2026, at the Donald J. Trump- John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)

President Donald Trumpโ€™s pull inside the Republican Party is still absolute.

His endorsement? Political gold.

โ€œThe Trump endorsement is king in any primary,โ€ longtime GOP strategist Jesse Hunt told Fox News Digital. Fellow Republican consultant Matt Gorman didnโ€™t mince words either, calling it โ€œan undeniable force.โ€

And that reality is driving a new, high-stakes strategy among vulnerable Republicans: if you canโ€™t win Trumpโ€™s backingโ€ฆ try to look like you have it anyway.

PLAYING DEFENSE AGAINST TRUMP-BACKED CHALLENGERS

Across the country, embattled GOP incumbents are facing serious primary threats from candidates backed by Trump himself. And instead of confronting that head-on, some are leaning into carefully crafted messaging that suggests theyโ€™re still aligned with the president.

Take Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy.

Cassidy โ€” one of just seven Republicans who voted to convict Trump after the January 6 impeachment โ€” is now locked in a tough primary against Trump-endorsed Rep. Julia Letlow.

But you wouldnโ€™t know that from his ads.

In one spot, Cassidy highlights a fentanyl bill he authored, adding:
โ€œPresident Trump said it was the most important legislation he would sign this year,โ€

Images of Trump appear prominently.

Another ad goes further, flashing โ€œTrump & Cassidyโ€ on screen while touting tax cuts the two โ€œworkedโ€ on together.

Notably missing? Any mention that Trump is backing his opponent.

MASSIEโ€™S PHOTO-OP FLASHBACK

In Kentucky, Rep. Thomas Massie โ€” a longtime Trump critic โ€” is facing a Trump-backed challenger, former Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein.

Massie has repeatedly clashed with Trump, including over the Epstein files and foreign policy. But in a recent campaign ad, he spotlighted an old photo of himself smiling alongside the former president.

A subtle signal โ€” but a deliberate one.

Meanwhile, Trump allies are pouring money into boosting Gallrein and attacking Massie.

CORNERNED IN TEXAS

In Texas, Sen. John Cornyn is fighting for survival in a runoff against MAGA favorite and state Attorney General John Paxton.

Trump hasnโ€™t endorsed either candidate โ€” but Cornyn is making sure voters remember their past relationship.

In one ad, the narrator says Cornyn โ€œhad his back,โ€ as footage shows Trump and the senator giving a thumbs-up together.

โ€œWe’re especially grateful to your wonderful senators,โ€ Trump says in an old clip featured in the ad, referring to Cornyn and Sen. Ted Cruz.

Unlike Cassidy and Massie, Cornyn isnโ€™t contradicting an endorsement โ€” but heโ€™s still leaning hard into Trumpโ€™s image.

HIGH-RISK STRATEGY?

The tactic may be clever โ€” but itโ€™s also dangerous.

Hunt warns that implying support from Trump when you donโ€™t actually have it could blow up fast.

โ€œIf you havenโ€™t earned it but portray as though you have, it could be the end of your campaign,โ€ he said. โ€œThatโ€™s if the President decides to take issue with it.โ€

In todayโ€™s GOP, one thing is clear: crossing Trump is risky โ€” but pretending heโ€™s on your side when he isnโ€™t could be even worse.

Candace Owens Gets Swift Backlash After Unveiling New Project Targeting Erika Kirk

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Image via Gage Skidmore Flickr

Candace Owens announced Monday that her show will return to the air on Wednesday with a new โ€œinvestigative seriesโ€ targeting Erika Kirk, the widow of slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk โ€” and the backlash was immediate.

The teaser trailer, which Owens shared on X, opens with news coverage of Charlie Kirkโ€™s assassination before pivoting sharply to its apparent target: his widow. The trailer splices together clips of Erika Kirk with critical commentary about her, references to โ€œZionistsโ€ and Israel, and even an implication that the Turning Point USA CEO was somehow connected to a Romanian human trafficking scandal.

The series is titled โ€œBride of Charlie,โ€ and its promotional banner depicts Erika wearing a crown โ€” imagery that many critics have described as taunting and grotesque given the circumstances.

Owens, who has promoted a range of conspiracy theories about her former colleagueโ€™s death, initially claimed she would stop discussing the matter if Erika asked her to. Over time, however, her commentary shifted. What began as insinuation evolved into increasingly direct suggestions that the widow herself may have played a role in betraying her husband.

In the hours after Owens publicized the project, social media filled with condemnation from across the political spectrum.

โ€œEveryday, thereโ€™s some new line being crossed by this lunatic that makes me wonder whether certain people will finally speak up,โ€ mused RedStateโ€™s Bonchie. โ€œThey wonโ€™t, though. Not even this will be enough, and itโ€™s probably time to start asking why they are so invested in Owens.โ€

The timing of Owensโ€™ blistering attack is especially striking. It comes just as the criminal case against Tyler Robinson โ€” the man accused of assassinating Charlie Kirk at a Sept. 10 event at Utah Valley University โ€” reaches a critical juncture.

On Tuesday morning at 10:30 a.m. local time, Judge Tony Graf is scheduled to rule during a WebEx hearing on whether to disqualify state prosecutors over an alleged conflict of interest. Robinson is expected to listen from jail.

The defense has argued that a conflict exists because one of the prosecutorsโ€™ children was present at the university event where Kirk was killed. According to Robinsonโ€™s attorney, Richard Novak, that connection could compromise the integrity of the prosecution โ€” particularly in a case where the state is seeking the death penalty.

There have already been two hearings on the issue.

During a Feb. 3 proceeding, Novak questioned Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray in an effort to determine when prosecutors decided to pursue capital punishment โ€” a decision that was publicly announced shortly after Robinsonโ€™s arrest. An unnamed senior prosecutor, identified only as โ€œProsecutor A,โ€ also testified about the officeโ€™s internal handling of the case and its decision to disclose the childโ€™s presence to the defense.

The prosecutor said there was no recollection of a specific conversation with Gray about how to proceed given the childโ€™s presence, though it was acknowledged that Gray routinely consults senior prosecutors in death penalty cases. The testimony also revealed that Gray expressed early on that he intended to seek the death penalty and wanted that decision announced at the same time charges were filed โ€” earlier than is typical, as such notices often follow a preliminary hearing.

For its part, the state maintains there is no conflict of interest. Prosecutors have argued in court filings that thousands of people witnessed the shooting and that the child in question did not have a direct line of sight to the alleged gunman. Even if a conflict were found, the state contends, it would not justify disqualifying the entire prosecutorial team.

As the court weighs a decision that could significantly alter the course of the trial, Owensโ€™ decision to launch a provocative series targeting the victimโ€™s widow has only deepened the sense of outrage surrounding an already tragic case.

Hillary Clinton Makes Big Reveal Regarding Potential Presidential Bid

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Hillary Clinton via Gage Skidmore Flickr

During an interview with CBS Morning News, Hillary Clinton said she will not be running for president in the future.

โ€œNo, no, but Iโ€™m going to do everything I can to make sure that we have a president who respects our democracy and the rule of law and upholds our institutions,โ€ Clinton said.

Norah O’Donnell didn’t seem quite pleased with Clinton’s answer and once again pressed the former first lady, this time asking if her answer would change if former President Donald Trump were to run for president.

โ€œHe should be soundly defeated,” Clinton said. “It should start in the Republican Party. Grow a backbone. Stand up to this guy.”

John Bolton Says AG Garland Doesn’t Stand a Chance Against Trump

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Marine One lifts-off after returning President Donald J. Trump to Mar-a-Lago Friday, March 29, 2019, following his visit to the 143-mile Herbert Hoover Dike near Canal Point, Fla., that surrounds Lake Okeechobee. The visit was part of an infrastructure inspection of the dike, which is part of the Kissimmee-Okeechobee Everglades system, and reduces impacts of flooding for areas of south Florida. (Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian) [Photo Credit: The White House from Washington, DC, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons]

The legal reasoning of the Department of Justice isn’t too outlandish according to John Bolton, the former Trump National Security Advisor told CNN.

The problem is politically Trump is going to “slaughter” Garland, according to Bolton.

The Daily Caller reports, that Bolton told CNN that Trump doesn’t care about normal procedures, and Garland having to follow normal procedures of the DOJ is leaving him vulnerable.

So vulnerable, Bolton called him a lamb.

Botlon said, โ€œIf we were in a Colosseum with two gladiators, one of them Donald Trump, the other Merrick Garland, weโ€™d be about to witness the slaughter of the lambs. The Justice Department understandably wants to follow its normal procedures. Itโ€™s facing an adversary who couldnโ€™t care less about the normal procedures.โ€

Bolton also criticized the department’s PR strategy. Saying the need to do more to explain what they are up to in investigating Trump.

So far the department is “not doing enough” to justify why they needed to search Mar-a-Lago, according to Bolton.

Another big issue is that the DOJ and FBI violated Trump’s rights but violating the search warrant. The FBI overstepped its authority abd took documents that were attorney-client privileged and not considered presidential records.

As we reported yesterday, the FBI took three of Trump’s passports wrongfully.

[READ NEXT: FBI Violated Trump’s Rights in Terrible Way]