Anonymous ID: ff1767 Jan. 22, 2025, 3:38 a.m. No.22409082   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9115

Sadie

@Sadie_NC

 

These are the people who need to be kept far away from president Trump.

 

What a wacko.

 

4:17 PM · Jan 21, 2025

·417.4K

Views

 

https://x.com/Sadie_NC/status/1881813472146858147

 

PDJT needs a lot more security, the nuts are coming out of the woodwork

Anonymous ID: ff1767 Jan. 22, 2025, 4:06 a.m. No.22409159   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9238

>>22408413 Trump makes janitors out of those who government officials who raided Mar-a-Lago because he couldn't just fire them, but he could reassign them.PN

 

Trump’s DOJ reassigns several career officials, including one who pushed for Mar-a-Lago raid: report

By Published Jan. 21, 2025, 9:10 p.m. ET

The Trump administration has reportedly reassigned more than a dozen career Justice Department officials, including one who played a central role in pushing for the FBI raid of Mar-a-Lago.

 

The new assignments – given to at least 15 longtime officials– will see the federal employees remain within DOJ but in the roles where they are expected to wield less influence on the department’s major decision, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday.

 

Some officials were notified they were being transferred just hours after President Trump was sworn-in on Monday, according to the outlet.

 

Deputy Assistant Attorney General George Toscas, who has served in the DOJ’s national security division for nearly 20 years, is reportedly among the officials being moved.

 

Toscas was a key figure in the DOJ’s push for theAugust 2022 FBI raid of President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, after the 45th president allegedly defied the National Archives’ repeated requests for White House documents from his first term in office.

 

Toscas fumed to FBI officials that he didn’t “give a damn about the optics” of an unprecedented raid of a former president’s home during a combative callbetween the DOJ and the bureau’s Washington Field Office ahead of the issuance of a warrant to search for the documents, court filings in former special counsel Jack Smith’s dismissed classified documents case against Trump show.

 

“You and your leadership seem to have gone from cautious to fearful,”Toscas reportedly wrote in an email to the former head of the FBI Washington Field Office, Steven D’Antuono,after the phone call, according to NBC News.

 

Toscas allegedlytold D’Antuono, who had initially opposed the raid, that he was “way out of line on substance and form” for resisting the search of Trump’s residence.

 

Trump, 78, has argued that the raid and subsequent criminal cases brought against him are emblematic of the Biden administration’s “weaponization” of the DOJ, which on the campaign trail he vowed to do away with if elected to a second term.

 

Toscas has reportedly been reassigned to the DOJ’s new Office of Sanctuary Cities Enforcement.

 

The transferred employees may opt to resign from DOJ altogether rather than take the new roles.

 

Some of Toscas’ former colleagues told the Washington Post thathis experience as a counterintelligence attorney will be missed.(Too Fucking Bad? This guy was involved in Russia hoax)

 

“He has seen everything in both counterterrorism and counterintelligence,” a former DOJ National Security Division employee anonymously told the outlet. “There is no one in the department who knows as much about prosecuting and investigating terrorists and spies as George Toscas.”

 

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.

 

https://nypost.com/2025/01/21/us-news/trump-doj-reassigns-several-career-officials-including-one-who-pushed-for-mar-a-lago-raid-report/

Anonymous ID: ff1767 Jan. 22, 2025, 4:10 a.m. No.22409172   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9174 >>9178 >>9201 >>9210

Charlie Kirk

@charliekirk11

 

President Trump just removed affirmative action from the federal government hiring practices

 

This reverses LBJ’s executive order 11246

 

We will have a government based on merit, not race

 

This is massive

 

Reagan, HW Bush, and Bush never dared to touch it

 

Now it’s gone

 

America is rising

11:16 PM · Jan 21, 2025

·2.1M

Views

 

https://x.com/charliekirk11/status/1881918784362975317

 

Why wasn't this done when the SC overruled it last year or year before?

Anonymous ID: ff1767 Jan. 22, 2025, 4:35 a.m. No.22409238   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9239 >>9419

>>22409159

Justice Dept. removes senior career officials from key positions 1/2

Story by Perry Stein, Ellen Nakashima

 

The Trump administration has removed and reassigned several top career officials in the Justice Department’snational security and criminal divisions, according to multiple people familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss personnel matters.

 

Two of the people said thatat least 15 experienced career staffersacross several divisions were removed from their positions and reassigned, a sign that the new president and his aides plan to carry out their promises to dramatically reshape the agency, including to focus more on immigration enforcement.

 

As a way to skirt legal protections afforded to career staffers, many of the officials weretransferred to other positions inside Justice, where they would probably have less influenceon the department’s big decisions, the people said. The officials will have to decide whether to stay in their new assignments or leave the agency.

 

The Justice Department declined to comment.

 

Trump and his allies have long attacked the Justice Department and accused it of unfairly targeting them, including during special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation of possible links between Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia. The animosity escalated after Trump finished his first term, as the agency investigated both Trump’s alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election results and his alleged mishandling of classified documents and obstruction of government efforts to retrieve them.

 

Among the people being removed from the national security division is deputy assistant attorney general=George Toscas,who has served there since 2006, according to three people familiar with the matter. Two people said he was transferred to a newly created Office of Sanctuary Cities Enforcement in the associate attorney general’s office.The office is tasked with identifying ways to enforce federal immigration laws, a top priority of the new president.

 

Toscaswas a senior counterintelligence attorneywho played a key role in deciding to search Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residenceto retrieve the classified documents as part of that federal investigation. He served as a deputy in the national security division during the first Trump administration.

 

“He has seen everything in both counterterrorism and counterintelligence,” said a former colleague in the National Security Division, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss information that has not been made public. “There is no one in the department who knows as much about prosecuting and investigating terrorists and spies as George Toscas.”

 

Eun Young Choi, another deputy assistant attorney general in the national security division, and Bruce Swartz, a longtime deputy in the criminal division who focuses on international affairs, also were removed from their posts and reassigned elsewhere, the people familiar with the matter said.They were notified of the change by emailon Monday afternoon, the people said. (Choi was involved in Russia Gate)

 

=Choi was assigned to the sanctuary cities office like Toscas,two people said.Swartz, who has been in the department more than 30 years and has served as deputy assistant attorney general of international affairs for most of that time,was effectively demoted to be the deputy of the Office of Prosecutorial Development and Training, an office he used to oversee, three of the people said.

 

“He [Swartz]has served everyone from Jeff Sessions to Bill Barr to Eric Holder and Merrick Garland and is by far themost knowledgeable= person on the planet about therelationships the department has with foreign governments, extraditions, rule of law,” said another former senior Justice official, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity.

 

While many officials at Justice and other agencies leave government at the start of a new administration,these reassignments were unusual because they were ordered just as Trump took office, said Mary McCord, a former Justice Department official who runs the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown University. (This bitch worked with Norm Eisen for years to destroy Trump and she still is, she should be arrested for treason.)

 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/justice-dept-removes-senior-career-officials-from-key-positions/ar-AA1xC3tK

Anonymous ID: ff1767 Jan. 22, 2025, 4:36 a.m. No.22409239   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22409238

2/2

Top deputy positions in the national security division are typically career positions, though it’s possible the Trump administration is reassigning the career people to replace them with political appointees, she said.

 

“I don’t believe there were ever any career people fired at transition since the national security divisionwas founded,” McCord said. “One of the values of having career deputies in the national security division is consistency, institutional memory and the relationships that they build with our national security partners.” (McCord is the worst, she should go to jail)

 

The chief of the Justice Department’spublic integrity section, Corey Amundson, is also being removedfrom his post, according to people familiar with the personnel move.The section oversees election crimesand investigations into public officials, and its chief is a nonpartisan career official, according to theJustice Department website. Amundson became chief during the first Trump administration.

 

On Monday night, hours after Trump’s inauguration,theJustice Department removed at least four top officials from the part of the agency that operates the nation’s heavily backlogged immigration courts.

 

Federal guidelines call for a 120-day moratorium on certain staff reassignments after new, Senate-confirmed agency leaders start their appointments.But that moratorium is not yet in effectat Justice, where attorney general nominee Pam Bondi and others tapped for top positions are still going through the confirmation process.

 

“We’re witnessing the dismembering of a (corrupt) core cadre of nonpartisan (???), institutional experience that is invaluable to the Justice Department’s mission, including that of protecting the national security of the United States,” said David Laufman,== a former senior Justice Department official who served in both political and career positions under Republican and Democratic administrations.

 

For now, James McHenry, a longtime immigration enforcement official at Justice, is running the agency as actingU.S. attorney general. McHenry served during the Biden administration as the Justice Department’s chief administrative hearing officer, overseeing the department’s administrative judges. During the first Trump administration, he directed the Executive Office of Immigration Review.

 

Some experts say that incoming agency heads and political supervisors are not allowed to have other officials carry out reassignments before they arrive just to avoid the moratorium.

 

If the reassignments are a way to remove career leadership, it’s “very concerning,” said the second former senior Justice official, who noted that those being reassigned are some of the department’s most experienced and knowledgeable leaders. “The beating heart of Justice Department is the career workforce. … That’s what really makes the department run, not the political relationship.”(bullshit)

 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/justice-dept-removes-senior-career-officials-from-key-positions/ar-AA1xC3tK

Anonymous ID: ff1767 Jan. 22, 2025, 5:01 a.m. No.22409318   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9428 >>9620 >>9721 >>9744

Tucker Carlson

@TuckerCarlson

 

Youtube Video Attached

 

Having been indicted by the Biden DOJ for political crimes, New York Mayor Eric Adams is sounding a lot like a Trump voter these days.

 

(0:00) Eric Adams’ Indictment Is Ridiculous

(6:04) How Biden Destroyed New York With Immigration

(17:27) What Do New Yorkers Think About the Illegal Immigrants?

(19:10) Pressing Adams on His Sanctuary City Policy

(22:36) How Illegal Immigration Is Fueling America’s Labor Crisis

(29:43) How to Clean Up New York

(37:55) Did Eric Adams Leave the Democrat Party?

(40:34) Will Adams Go to Jail?

(41:32) Adams’ Conversation With Donald Trump

(45:54) America’s Mental Health Crisis

 

Includes paid partnerships.

 

https://x.com/TuckerCarlson/status/1881854369894703418?mx=2

Anonymous ID: ff1767 Jan. 22, 2025, 6:01 a.m. No.22409627   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9634 >>9639

EXCLUSIVE Biden's final humiliation: Most Americans can't name one success and will remember him for doing 'nothing'

 

Jan. 19, 2025

 

JL Partners asked 1,009 registered voters for their view on Biden's legacy

The results are far from flattering but supporters say history will be kinder

It is the one question that unites Americans when it comes to President Joe Biden.

 

Ask Democrats, Republicans or independents for their one-word summary of his legacy and they put aside their differences to answer almost unanimously: Nothing.

 

Those are the extraordinary results of an exclusive poll conducted for DailyMail.com by J.L. Partners.

 

Some 1,009 registered voters were asked for their brief description of the legacy of Biden, who leaves the White House on Monday at the age of 82 after four turbulent years.

 

When the results are arranged in a word cloud, the most common answer sticks out at the center. The next most popular answers are economy, inflation, and infrastructure, in a more encouraging nod to one of his landmark pieces of legislation.

 

Yet the same word, 'nothing' stands out when the responses are split by political persuasion.

 

For Democrats, the memory is softened by other words such as 'good,' 'stability,' and 'better.'

 

But as Biden prepares for a life outside politics for the first time in half a century, and plans for a presidential library and other elements of his legacy, it suggests at least the first draft of history is unlikely to be kind to him.

 

And there is worse in other parts of the poll.

 

When voters were asked whether they can remember a single Biden achievement, more than half say they cannot. Some 37 percent say they 'strongly' agree with the statement that they cannot name a single one.

 

Even Democrats struggle. More than a third said they could not name a single achievement.

 

The results echo an earlier poll, which found that voters ranked Biden as the least successful of recent president.

 

James Johnson, co-founder of J.L. Partners, said it was a diabolical

 

'As far as public opinion is concerned, you have to squint to see even the echoes of a legacy—and even then people are more likely to remember it negatively,' he said.

 

'Biden’s biggest achievements in office—such as legislation in Congress – are crowded out by the overriding view: That he was responsible for inflation, and that he was a mentally unwell Commander-in-Chief.

 

'Perhaps the history books will be different, but in the minds of the public there’s no legacy to be seen.'

 

Biden has been burnishing his legacy during the past week.

 

First came a major foreign policy speech in which he said his successor will inherit a nation that is leading the world once again.

 

'My administration is leaving the next administration with a very strong hand to play,' he said. 'And we're leaving an America with more friends and stronger alliances, whose adversaries are weaker and under pressure.'

 

On the domestic front he has received plaudits for leading the country out of the pandemic and the associated economic upheaval.

 

And some of his legislative achievements could yet positive economic impacts far into the future.

 

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 authorized $1.2 trillion of spending, cash which will be spent on bridges, airports and railways for years to come.

 

He also pushed through the Inflation Reduction Act, which kickstarted investment in green technology, among other things.

 

Democratic strategist Brad Bannon said it was clear that voters had little appreciation for Biden now. But he believed history would be kind to the 46th president.

 

'I think he's going to be regarded in the future as a prophet, because I think we'll look back at the inflation Reduction Act and his other environmental activism, and say: "Boy, I wish we had paid more attention then to what he did,' he said.

 

He added that some blame lay with the White House, which had struggled to deliver a coherent message at times.

 

Biden himself, in a farewell message Wednesday, claimed to have put in place policies whose impacts would be felt years into the future.

 

'You know, it will take time to feel the full impact of all we’ve done together,' he said. 'But the seeds are planted, and they’ll grow and they’ll bloom for decades to come.'

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14284731/poll-joe-biden-legacy-inauguration.html