Trump, Signal and Republicans
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Republican calls to investigate a group chat in which White House national security officials shared sensitive military information has intensified, with Oklahoma Senator James Lankford saying it is "...
From BBC
Current and former US officials said they believe texts sent by national security adviser Mike Waltz and Ratcliffe might have damaged Americans’ ability to gather intelligence on the Iran-backed Hout...
From CNN
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23hon MSN
I don’t fire people because of fake news and because of witch hunts,” Trump said in an interview with NBC News.
Despite being prohibited by the Constitution, President Donald Trump did not rule out the possibility of seeking a third term in the White House during an interview with NBC News.Trump said there were methods for doing so,
Trump, you may love Michael Waltz. You love Pete Hegseth. You may love these guys. Somebody has to go down,” David Portnoy said.
The Trump White House’s reflexive attempt to attack the messenger, on the other hand, is an illustration of the new administration’s biggest political problem: its difficulty in speaking to anyone who isn’t already invested in its cause.
4don MSN
Trump administration officials are struggling to stem the fallout from revelations that top national security officials discussed sensitive attack plans over a messaging app and mistakenly added a jou
Several routinely pro-Donald Trump figures pushed back this week on the White House’s handling of the Signal scandal, calling it a “shockingly egregious f*ck-up” and at least one urged the president to fire his national security adviser.
The White House doubled down Wednesday on its insistence that its top national security officials did nothing wrong when they discussed a pending military strike in Yemen over a commercial messaging app known as Signal.
Although Trump decided not to fire his national security adviser over the Signal group chat, Waltz’s position is tenuous, officials say.
4d
WRIC Richmond on MSNWhite House scrambles to contain Signal chat falloutThe White House on Wednesday scrambled to contain the controversy of a Signal chat among national security officials that became public, opting for its signature defiant approach but one that left