Wednesday, May 28, 2025

'Intensely loyal' Jill Biden aide despised by White House staffers, new book claimsNew Foto - 'Intensely loyal' Jill Biden aide despised by White House staffers, new book claims

PresidentJoe Biden'saides consider first lady Jill Biden one of the most powerful first ladies in history, according to the new book, "Original Sin," by CNN anchor Jake Tapper and Axios political correspondent Alex Thompson. By proxy, the first lady's top aide, Anthony Bernal, became one of the most influential people in theWhite House, Tapper and Thompson said in their new book about Biden's cognitive decline and the administration's alleged cover-up. "He would not be welcome at my funeral," a longtime Biden aide told the authors. Operating in aWhite Houseanchored in loyalty, Bernal wielded loyalty as a weapon to weed out the defectors, Tapper and Thompson said. 'The Kamala Excuse': Tensions Between Biden And Harris Plagued Their Campaigns, New Book Reveals "He considered loyalty to be the defining virtue and would wield that word to elevate some and oust others – at times fairly and at times not. 'Are you a Biden person?' he would ask West Wing aides. 'Is so-and-so a Biden person?' The regular interrogations led some colleagues to dub him the leader of the 'loyalty police,'" the journalists wrote in "Original Sin." Read On The Fox News App New Book Reveals Biden's Inner Circle Worried About His Age Years Before Botched Debate Performance During the pandemic, Biden traded the campaign trail for lockdown. Two aides, Bernal and Annie Tomasini, found their way into Joe and Jill Biden's pod, shifting the power dynamic of Biden's so-called "Politiburo," the group of advisors who steered Biden's political orbit. Tapper and Thompson describe the "intensely loyal" duo as taking on an "older-brother-and-little-sister vibe." Thompson even had the title of deputy campaign manager, which Tapper and Thompson said was "unusual for a staffer to a spouse." The duo were the masterminds behind loading a teleprompter for Biden ahead of a local interview, a misstep that followed Biden's campaign. "The significance of Bernal and Tomasini is the degree to which their rise in the Biden White House signaled the success of people whose allegiance was to the Biden family – not to the presidency, not to the American people, not to the country, but to the Biden theology," the authors wrote. Tapper and Thompson said it was difficult to find many Bernal defenders and described him as using his power to cast out "potential heretics." As Bernal earned a reputation for trash-talking fellow aides, "some even described him as the worst person they had ever met," Tapper and Thompson said. Bernal and Tomasini took on some of the residence staffers' roles in the White House. Tapper and Thompson said the aides "had all-time access to the living quarters, with their White House badges reading 'Res' – uncommon for such aides." When the Biden campaign began gearing up for a re-election campaign and some voiced fears about his age or battleground state polling, Bernal and other senior staffers reacted dismissively about Vice PresidentKamala Harrislaunching a bid. Bernal is quoted in the book as having said, "You don't run for four years – you run for eight." "He had already begun planning the first lady's 2025 international travel schedule," Tapper and Thompson said. Bernal worked overtime to elevate Jill Biden's "profile and glamour," freely criticizing her looks and outfits and even calling her "Jill," according to the authors. Jill Biden and Bernal worked in tandem, keeping score of "who was with them and against them." The book described the first lady as "one of the chief supporters of the president's decision to run for reelection, and one of the chief deniers of his deterioration." Bernal's loyalty to the Bidens never faltered, and even after the disastrous debate performance in July 2024, Jill Biden and Bernal were determined to keep pushing on through November, Tapper and Thompson said. Fox News Digital has written extensively dating back to the 2020 presidential campaign about Biden's cognitive decline and his inner circle'srole in covering it up. A former White House staffer fired back against Tapper and Thompson's allegations about Bernal in a statement to Fox News Digital. "A lot of vignettes in this book are either false, exaggerated, or purposefully omit viewpoints that don't fit the narrative they want to push. Anthony was a strong leader with high standards and a mentor to many. He's the type of person you want on a team - he's incredibly strategic, effective, and cares deeply about the people he manages," the former White House staffer said. Original article source:'Intensely loyal' Jill Biden aide despised by White House staffers, new book claims

'Intensely loyal' Jill Biden aide despised by White House staffers, new book claims

'Intensely loyal' Jill Biden aide despised by White House staffers, new book claims PresidentJoe Biden'saides consider first lad...
Johnson unsure of vote on 'big, beautiful bill'New Foto - Johnson unsure of vote on 'big, beautiful bill'

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin's senior U.S. Senator says his problems with the reconciliation plan have not changed in the few days since Hosue Republicans in the House put their stamp on it. Republican Sen. Ron Johnson was on CNN recently, explaining he continues to want to see a lot more spending cut out of President Donald Trump's big beautiful bill. "We need to be responsible. The first goal of our budget reconciliation process should be to reduce the deficit. This actually increases it," Johnson said. Johnson didn't have a specific price tag for how much he'd like to see cut. Instead, he once again said that the federal government needs to go back to pre-pandemic spending levels. "President Obama averaged about $910 billion of deficits per-year. President Trump, in first three years, averaged about $810 billion. Then COVID hit, and [we saw] over $3 trillion in deficit. It should have ended there," Johnson said. "But President Biden averages $1.9 trillion in deficits over his four years." Johnson said those Biden deficits have now grown to $2.2 trillion, which means $22 trillion more on the national debt over the next 10 years. Johnson is one of the loudest critics of the reconciliation package. And he has not backed down, even though Trump and other top Republicans said all Republicans need to get on-board with the plan. Johnson said he's been a deficit hawk since his first days in Washington, D.C., and said he's not changing that now. "In 2010, I sprang on the Tea Party movement and as I did parades, I would shout 'This is a fight for freedom. We are mortgaging our children's future. It is wrong, it's immoral, and it has to stop,'" Johnson said. "I haven't changed. My campaign promise in 2010, and in every campaign after that, was to stop mortgaging our children's future." Johnson said this is the best chance Republicans have had in decades to reduce the size of the deficit, and he doesn't want it to slip away. Despite Johnson's critiques of the reconciliation package, he has not said whether he will ultimately be a 'no' vote for the plan when it comes up for a vote in the Senate.

Johnson unsure of vote on ‘big, beautiful bill’

Johnson unsure of vote on 'big, beautiful bill' (The Center Square) – Wisconsin's senior U.S. Senator says his problems with the...
UN nuclear watchdog chief says 'jury is still out' on Iran-US talks, but calls them a good signNew Foto - UN nuclear watchdog chief says 'jury is still out' on Iran-US talks, but calls them a good sign

VIENNA (AP) — The head of the United Nations' atomic watchdog said Wednesday that "the jury is still out" on negotiations between Iran and the U.S. overTehran's rapidly advancing nuclear program, but described the continuing negotiations a good sign. Rafael Mariano Grossi, director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, described himself as being in near-daily conversation withIranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, as well as talking to Steve Witkoff, the U.S. Middle East envoy. Grossi acknowledged one of his deputies was in Tehran on Wednesday. Iranian officials identified the official as Massimo Aparo, the head of the IAEA's safeguards arm. That's the division that sends inspectors into Iran to monitor its program, which now enriches uranium up to 60% purity — a short, technical step from weapons-grade levels of 90%. "For the moment, the jury is still out. We don't know whether there's going to be an agreement or not," Grossi told journalists attending a weeklong seminar at the agency in Vienna. However, he described the ongoing meetings as a good sign. "I think that is an indication of a willingness to come to an agreement. And I think that, in and by itself, is something possible." Iran and the U.S. so far haveheld five rounds of talksin both Muscat, Oman, and Rome, mediated by Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi. A sixth round has yet to be set. Talks focused on Iranian enrichment The talks seek to limit Iran's nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of some of the crushing economic sanctions the U.S. has imposed on the Islamic Republic, closing in on ahalf-century of enmity. U.S.President Donald Trumphas repeatedly threatened tounleash airstrikes targeting Iran's program, if a deal isn't reached. Iranian officials increasingly warnthey could pursue a nuclear weaponwith their stockpile of uranium. Trump has described Iran as having an American proposal to reach a deal. However, Iran repeatedly has denied receiving such a proposal, including on Wednesday with Mohammad Eslami, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran. However, if a deal is reached, Iran might allow the IAEA to have American inspectors on their teams during inspections, Eslami said. Americans represent the largest single nationality of IAEA employees, a 2023 agency report showed. Iran maintains its own pressure Before Grossi's comments to journalists in Vienna, the head of Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard issued a new warning to the U.S. as the negotiations go on. "Our fingers on the trigger, we are in ambush and we are waiting," Gen. Hossein Salami warned. "If they make a mistake, they will immediately receive responses that will make them completely forget their past." Despite the tensions, Grossi said that he believed "there's always a way" to reach a deal between the Americans and the Iranians — even with the disagreement over enrichment. He added the IAEA had been making some "suggestions" to both the Iranians and the Americans, without elaborating. However, he added that any possible deal likely would require a "solid, very robust" IAEA investigation of Iran's program to understand where it stood after years of Tehran restricting inspectors' ability to assess it. "My conversations with my Iranian colleagues and counterparts, I always invite them to be absolutely transparent," Grossi said. "And they tell me that a nuclear weapon is un-Islamic. I tell them, 'Well, yeah. You know, that is perfect. It's a statement that I respect. But in this business, you have to show it. You have to be verified in this.'" And asked about his own political future, Grossi acknowledged his interest in pursuing the post of U.N. secretary-general, which is now held by António Guterres, whose current five-year term expires in 2027. "What I have said to colleagues in other parts of the world is that, seriously considering that, yes, but for the moment, I'm here and I have, as you can see from this discussion, I have a lot on my plate," he said. ___ Nasser Karimi and Amir Vahdat contributed to this report from Tehran, Iran. ___ The Associated Press receives support for nuclear security coverage fromthe Carnegie Corporation of New YorkandOutrider Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. ___ Additional AP coverage of the nuclear landscape:https://apnews.com/projects/the-new-nuclear-landscape/

UN nuclear watchdog chief says 'jury is still out' on Iran-US talks, but calls them a good sign

UN nuclear watchdog chief says 'jury is still out' on Iran-US talks, but calls them a good sign VIENNA (AP) — The head of the United...
Food trucks in Gaza raided, underscoring aid distribution problemsNew Foto - Food trucks in Gaza raided, underscoring aid distribution problems

By Nidal al-Mughrabi and James Mackenzie CAIRO/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -U.N. trucks delivering food to Gaza were stopped and looted overnight, Gaza residents and merchants said on Wednesday, hours after desperate Palestinians overran a distribution site run by a U.S.-backed group trying to start delivering aid. The incidents underscore the problems getting supplies to hundreds of thousands of Palestinians facing worsening hunger and starvation after a weeks-long Israeli blockade. On Tuesday, Israeli troops fired warning shots as crowds rushed to a distribution point run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a U.S.-backed group that began supplying aid under a new system which Israel hopes will prevent aid reaching Hamas. The United Nations and other international aid groups have refused to take part, saying the scheme violates the principle that aid should be distributed neutrally, based only on need. As the new system began, the Israeli military also allowed 95 trucks belonging to the U.N. and other aid groups into the enclave, but three Gaza residents and three merchants said a number of trucks were targeted by looters. One Palestinian transport operator said at least 20 trucks belonging to the U.N. World Food Programme were attacked shortly before midnight. "Some trucks made it through, then it seems that people became aware of that," one witness told Reuters via a chat app, declining to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue. "They woke up, some placed barriers on the road intercepted and stole the goods." Israeli forces, which resumed their operation in Gaza in March following a brief truce, continued strikes on Wednesday, killing at least 15 people including eight members of the family of a local journalist, Palestinian health officials said. SCREENING To qualify for aid under the new system, people seeking food are supposed to undergo screening to ensure they are not linked to Hamas, a measure that has heightened Palestinian suspicion of the operation. But witnesses on Tuesday said that no effective identification process seemed to be in place. "What we saw yesterday was a very clear example of the dangers of distributing food," said Ajith Sunghay, Head of the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. "We are exposing people to death and injury," he told reporters in Geneva, adding that 47 people had been wounded by gunfire as the chaos unfolded. Footage shared on social media showed fences broken down by crowds trying to reach crates of supplies as private security contractors operating the site fell back. "I am a big man, but I couldn't hold back my tears when I saw the images of women, men, and children racing for some food," said Rabah Rezik, 65, a father of seven from Gaza City. Israel imposed the blockade on aid supplies in March, accusing Hamas of seizing supplies meant for civilians, a charge Hamas denies. U.N. officials say they have seen no evidence that the militant group has been looting trucks since Israel eased the blockade this month under mounting international pressure. However, Hamas has told people in Gaza not to go to the four distribution points in southern Gaza set up for the new system. It denied accusations from Israel that it was blocking access to the sites. INCREASING PRESSURE The U.S. ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, called it "sad and disgusting" that the United Nations and other groups were not taking part in the new system to distribute aid. "There were lines of people that got food which was not stolen by Hamas. The manner in which it was distributed is effective so far," he told Reuters. Israel has faced increasing pressure over the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, even from countries long reluctant to voice strong criticism. France, Britain and Germany have said they may take action if the military campaign is not halted. On Wednesday, Italy also said the offensive had become unacceptable and must stop immediately. Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in retaliation for the Hamas-led attack on communities in southern Israel on October 7, 2023 that killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 hostages abducted into Gaza. Its assault has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians and reduced much of the crowded coastal enclave to rubble, with the population of more than 2 million now squeezed into narrow areas on the coast and around the southern city of Khan Younis. (Additional reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin in Geneva and Steven Scheer in Jerusalem; Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

Food trucks in Gaza raided, underscoring aid distribution problems

Food trucks in Gaza raided, underscoring aid distribution problems By Nidal al-Mughrabi and James Mackenzie CAIRO/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -U.N....
Trump administration sues North Carolina election officials over thousands of voter registrationsNew Foto - Trump administration sues North Carolina election officials over thousands of voter registrations

The Justice Department filed a lawsuit Tuesday against North Carolina election officials targeting the registration records of potentially hundreds of thousands of registered voters in the state. The new lawsuit alleges the North Carolina State Board of Elections violated the Help America Vote Act by failing to collect and record voters' driver's license numbers or the last four digits of their Social Security numbers. It pivots off of an argument made by a GOP state Supreme Court candidate whotried unsuccessfullyto overturn his defeat to a Democratic incumbent. The Trump administration is asking for a court order that would require election officials to contact the registered voters in North Carolina who, according to the lawsuit, lack that information in their registration records. The lawsuit says a "significant number" of registered voters lack the information, and it references an earlier administrative complaint with the board that estimated the number to be more than 200,000 registered voters. In a statement, board Executive Director Sam Hayes said that he only recently became aware of the lawsuit but that the "failure to collect the information required by HAVA has been well documented." "Rest assured that I am committed to bringing North Carolina into compliance with federal law," Hayes said. The new lawsuit follows through on priorities for President Donald Trump's second-term Justice Department, which administration officials have said would focus on cleaning voting rolls and rooting out election fraud. Several voting rights lawsuits brought by the prior administration have been dismissed by the new leadership. The head of the department's Civil Rights Division, Harmeet Dhillon, has made comments welcoming a mass exodus of career DOJ attorneys, describing them as being unwilling to execute the agenda of the president whom Americans put in the office. There is no evidence of widespread voter fraud in US elections. The lawsuit references an election rules overhaul Trump is trying to implement nationwide through an executive order. "The cornerstone of public trust in government lies in free and fair elections. The core of the compact between a state and its citizens rests in ensuring that only eligible citizens can vote in elections," the complaint says. With the new case, the department is following up on legal claims made by Judge Jefferson Griffin, who lost last year by 734 votes to state Supreme Court Justice Allison Riggs. Griffin argued that the ballots of some 60,000 voters who lacked the ID numbers in their registration records should be thrown out, an argument that the Republican-leaning North Carolina Supreme Court rejected. In its ruling, the state Supreme Court noted Griffin had presented no evidence that a "significant number" of these 60,000 votes "were cast by individuals whose identity was not verified by voter identification or who were not otherwise qualified to vote." The court did rule in favor of challenges Griffin was bringing to a smaller pool of ballots, but that ruling was blocked by a federal judge. Griffin backed down from the legal fight earlier this month. Unlike Griffin's retrospective arguments, the court order that the Justice Department seeks is forward-looking, as the DOJ is demanding a sweeping process for updating the voter registrations of the 200,000 individuals said to be missing the numbers in the state's database. If a voter reports lacking the ID numbers in question when contacted by state election officials, under the process the DOJ lawsuit proposes, they would be assigned a special identifying number. The lawsuit, however, does not make clear whether the affected voters who do not respond to outreach from election officials should be purged from the rolls entirely. A spokesperson for the DOJ did not respond to CNN's request for clarity. Clerical errors that led to voters' ID numbers to not be recorded were flagged to North Carolina election officials well before the dispute over the state Supreme Court race, and they were subject to an unsuccessful Republican Party lawsuit brought before the 2024 election. The board has already fixed the registration forms that failed to list the ID numbers as required information. The new DOJ lawsuit, however, takes issue with the "ad hoc" plan the state board has put forward for updating the existing registrations missing the information – by having county officials collect it if and when those voters show up at polling places to vote. State law requires voters to show photo ID when they cast a ballot. Until recently, the majority of the election board's members were appointees of the Democratic governor. The board was recently reconfigured to be majority-Republican appointees, under a law passed by North Carolina's GOP-controlled legislature last year just before Republicans lost their supermajority in the state Capitol. Hayes was appointed as the board's new executive director by Republican majority. CNN's Hannah Rabinowitz and Ethan Cohen contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump administration sues North Carolina election officials over thousands of voter registrations

Trump administration sues North Carolina election officials over thousands of voter registrations The Justice Department filed a lawsuit Tue...

 

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