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Elon Musk is calling for the removal of the entire US government agency
As part of his push under President Trump, Elon Musk called for the removal of entire government agencies from the federal government, radically cutting spending and restructuring its priorities.
Fox – Seattle
WASHINGTON – A year later, it’s not just the president standing on the podium that’s different.
When President Donald Trump spoke to a joint Congressional meeting on Tuesday, the political landscape he investigates from Days has transformed since warning Joe Biden’s rebels faced democratic and tyrannical choices in the final state of his union speech.
This year, the ranks of Congress have been placed before Trump, and the four seats occupied by Democrats last year are held by Republicans, who together control the Senate. The number of House Republicans believes it is sufficient to hold the narrowest margin of the GOP.
And since the inauguration ceremony six weeks ago, changes have been cascaded.
The lineup of uniforms and medal national leaders in the front row seat of the president on the right is scrambled with an unprecedented purge of co-director Charles Q. Brown Jr., head of naval operations and deputy prime minister of the war. Trump had already fired the Coast Guard commander.
The cooperation between the ambassadors sitting on the far left of the president was etched upon by Trump’s resolve to end the war in Ukraine, with the oval offices that sent Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday and Ukrainian President Volodymia Zelensky packings. It is noted that two US’s biggest trading partners, Canada and Mexico, are subject to a 25% tariff on speech day, with former flavour countries, including Denmark and Panama, being dominated by proposals for territorial expansion.
Even the reporters sitting in the press gallery behind and above Days face confusion over his decision to restrict access to Associated Press journalists at the White House in a debate over whether the press will use Trump’s nomenclature for the rest of the world’s waters. (He renamed it to the US Gulf.)
The White House was recently posted on social media site X, with fake editions of magazines like Time, when Trump arrived on the cover, crowns and grin. Headline: “The Long Living King.”
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White House seeks to rehire fired USDA bird flu officials
The Trump administration is reportedly trying to rehire USDA officials who were fired over the weekend when they tackled the avian flu reaction.
Straight Arrow News
“We’ve made great strides,” Trump declared last week at a joint press conference with French President Emmanuel Macron. “People say it’s the best month for the president in our country’s history. I hope it’s right, but I feel it’s right.”
The tension and drama of House Chamber highlights how history has been running quickly since the start of his second season. Through the intrigue of executive orders, untested presidential authorities and billionaire partner Elon Musk, Trump has thrown Washington into the chaos he saw only during World War I and the economic catastrophe.
Reality check: The government is about to run out of money
Not all political laws have been abolished.
Congress will need to fund the federal government, which is officially running out of money on March 14th, 10 days after the speech. Last week’s house took the first stage of several steps, passing a budget blueprint that calls for a cut of $2 trillion expenditure and a tax cut of up to $4.5 trillion.
But the debate is confusing, with the Republican edge being very narrow, and speaker Mike Johnson could only lose one vote to win without crossing the aisle. The department remains in the GOP among the deficit Hawks who want to strain to reduce government red ink and sabotage Medicaid and other domestic programs.
Johnson may ultimately need the support of at least a few Democrats to avoid government shutdowns.
“Let me be clear: House Democrats will not offer a single vote on this reckless Republican budget,” and “Hospital Democrat leader Haquem Jeffries vows to stand behind a sign saying, “Save Medicaid.”
So far, Congressional Democrats who have been unable to do much to stop Trump’s steam locomotives except to speak up are disliked to agree to spending plans without assuring the president won’t ignore it. The administration is already caught up in legal challenges for his move to freeze Congress-approved spending.
It is an issue that could ultimately be resolved by the Supreme Court, and at this point it looms as the biggest institutional guardrail for Trump’s presidential forces’ most widespread claims. Three of the nine appointed by Trump during his first term are in front row seats next to the cabinet.
However, the justice of black robes may be difficult to read. They traditionally maintain the face of poker during speeches by the president of either party.
Since the coalition state last year, the increasingly conservative high court with 6-3 votes has granted a wide range of new immunity from prosecutions to exercise “nuclear” constitutional powers on Trump and other presidents. The majority decision, which took over in July, said it would protect “energizing” executives who are trying to take “bold” action.
For Trump, good and bad news about his approval rating
Of course, the most important audience on Tuesday night is not at home. It’s the Americans watching on TV and live streams, and often the largest national audience the president orders that year.
So far, Trump’s approval rates have been higher than his first term in 2017, but they have continued to significantly slower the positions of other presidents after the first month of his inauguration.
In the latest Gallup poll, 45% of those surveyed approved the work they do as president, 51% disapproved, and a net negative rating of 6% points. This is 15 percentage points below the average approval rate for all elected presidents at this point since the vote began in earnest at Dwight Eisenhower.
Trump was supported by almost all Republicans, with 93% approval, and few Democrats were at 4%. His support among independents, voters who tend to decide on elections, was slippery at 37%. Partisans are determined about Trump, but independents may be waiting.
A year ago, Biden tried to use his administration’s speech to remind Americans of his administration’s accomplishments, from post-pandemic recovery to investing in infrastructure projects and climate programs. He wanted to reset his perception that he was too old to serve for another four years and could not raise his stakes for the future.
“In a literal sense, history sees it,” he said. “History is watching.”
History is still there.