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Top Senate Dems Demand Trump’s Chief of Staff Explain How She ‘Read the Epstein Files’

Wiles made several eyebrow-raising comments to Vanity Fair in an explosive profile earlier in the month, including verifying that Trump was on Epstein’s plane

The post Top Senate Dems Demand Trump’s Chief of Staff Explain How She ‘Read the Epstein Files’ first appeared on Mediaite.

The Latest Defenses of SCOTUS’s Corruption Only Make the Case Against It

Chris Geidner flags today an appearance by CBS News’ Chief Legal Correspondent Jan Crawford’s attacking Supreme Court critics who call...

‘Mayhem’: Farmer warns of catastrophic consequences from Trump’s federal workforce cuts



Since January, the Trump administration has reduced the federal workforce by roughly 10 percent – some 249,000 jobs – and one New York farmer is warning of what he said could be catastrophic consequences.

“We’re just going to see a huge amount of farms going out of business this year because of the mayhem,” said Wes Hillingham, a veteran organic farmer and environmental advocate from New York, speaking with the New York Times in its report Tuesday.

With a significant share of the federal workforce cuts impacting the Agriculture Department – which lost close to one-fifth of its entire staff, or around 20,000 employees – Hillingham told the Times that many farmers are struggling to get updates from the Trump administration on grants and other federal programs they had already accounted for in their planning.

Gillingham noted that even getting someone from the Agriculture Department on the phone was often a challenge.

The Trump administration appeared to downplay Hillingham’s concerns, however, with Agriculture Department spokesperson Alex Varsamis telling the Times that the Trump administration was “being transparent” about what he called its efforts to “return the department to a customer service focused, farmer-first agency.”

“President Trump is utilizing all the tools available to ensure farmers have what they need to continue their farming operations,” Varsamis said, speaking to the Times.

But for American farmers, particularly soybean farmers, 2025 has been a challenging year. Earlier this year, China, the single-largest importer of American-grown soybeans, instituted a full boycott of the crop, a move that left farmers outraged, and Trump, reportedly panicked, who quickly floated a $10 billion bailout for farmers. That bailout later grew to $12 billion, and is now expected to be delivered in February.

‘No one cares for him’: Trump appointee farmed out to menial jobs as co-workers revolt



A failed Donald Trump administration appointee to the Department of Homeland Security, whose nomination to head up the Office of Special Counsel was scuttled due to his well-documented racist past, ended up with a lesser job at the General Services Administration, where he has been greeted with nothing but loathing, reports Politico.

Paul Ingrassia, who has admitted he has a “Nazi streak,” was at the center of a firestorm after his OSC nomination, where GOP lawmakers made it clear he would not be approved. He then withdrew from consideration.

He was then shunted off to the GSA to the dismay of his future co-workers, one of whom complained, “What are we? A halfway house for bigots who can’t find jobs anywhere else in this administration?”

According to the Politico report, Ingrassia has not been welcomed with open arms and, despite being elevated to acting general counsel, the leadership of the agency is not entrusting him with anything important.

As one GSA official explained, the Trump ally, “basically won’t be given anything meaningful because [agency] leadership doesn’t really want him.”

“I don’t know what he is or is not, but no one cares for him,” another added.

The report adds that White House staffers were relieved they were able to find a department where he could be unloaded after his legal counsel nomination crashed and burned.

“Not sure anyone is like heartbroken,” one insider admitted. “It was never expected that it would go through, at least I never did.”

You can read more here.

2026 Will See a Major Wisconsin Supreme Court Race. Yes, Another One

When is Wisconsin not electing a Supreme Court justice?, weary voters may ask.  The seemingly rapid-fire judicial elections have captured...
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Inside Out: Art in Buffalo, NY

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How Redistricting and the Fate of the Voting Rights Act Might (Not) Impact the Midterms

The midterm elections are often treated by voters as a referendum on the current presidential administration’s performance. In recent history,...

Politicians Reach Different Conclusions on Minnesota Shooting Video

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