Brian Kilmeade unloads on Trump’s Iran deal: ‘This makes no sense’
President Donald Trump’s Iran deal is receiving a great deal of scrutiny from his own supporters, including Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade. The details of the Memorandum of […]

Republican Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton announced Wednesday that U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Jay Clayton’s confirmation hearing to be the next director of […]
President Donald Trump’s Iran deal is receiving a great deal of scrutiny from his own supporters, including Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade. The details of the Memorandum of […]
President Trump told reporters that the strike on an Iranian school at the beginning of the war is still "under investigation."
The Trump administration accelerated its assault on the US Education Department on Tuesday by announcing that the agency’s work defending civil rights and students with disabilities will be placed under the authority of other federal departments, a move that teachers, Democratic lawmakers, and advocacy organizations condemned as illegal and disastrous for vulnerable children.Linda McMahon, the billionaire education secretary who has enthusiastically advanced the destruction of her own agency, announced the transfer of the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services—which oversees the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)—to the US Department of Health and Human Services, headed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Additionally, the Justice Department will oversee the work of the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights, McMahon said, claiming the changes would “break down the bureaucratic barriers and strengthen the coordination of resources to improve programs that serve infants, toddlers, children, and adults.”Critics argued the moves would do the opposite, scattering crucial programs across departments that lack the expertise and resources to fulfill the education offices’ mandates, ultimately depriving children and their families of support.“Moving IDEA out of the Department of Education is not an administrative adjustment—it is an attack on the educational and civil rights foundation of the law,” said Becky Pringle, president of the National Education Association. “It would drag us backward by treating disability as a medical issue instead of an educational right and by unraveling decades of progress. The Department of Education is the only federal agency with the expertise, infrastructure, and specialists needed to protect students’ rights and ensure they receive the services they are guaranteed.”“Relocating the Office for Civil Rights to the Department of Justice as part of this scheme would further erode federal oversight and endanger disability-rights enforcement nationwide,” Pringle added.The Arc of the United States, a nonprofit that advocates for the rights of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, said that “moving special education to HHS and civil rights enforcement to DOJ would split apart the offices responsible for making disability rights real in schools, leaving families chasing answers across the federal government instead of getting accountability from one education agency.”“Moving IDEA oversight into HHS pushes students with disabilities toward a medical model, where disability is treated as a diagnosis to manage instead of a natural part of human life,” said Katy Neas, the group’s CEO. “When that mindset drives education decisions, students are more likely to be segregated, underestimated, or treated as separate from the school community.”“It’s an outrageous betrayal that undoes decades of hard-won progress for students.”The changes that McMahon announced Tuesday are part of the Trump administration’s effort to completely dismantle the Education Department, which cannot be legally abolished without congressional approval. The Washington Post noted that the newly targeted offices were among the last Education Department segments to “outsource major functions,” underscoring that the administration’s assault “has advanced far more than most observers predicted would be possible.”In addition to displacing agency functions, the Trump administration has gutted the Education Department’s staff, firing nearly half of its workers in what opponents say is an obvious effort to decimate public education.Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, said the transfer of critical functions out of the Education Department is unlawful, “usurping the power of the purse while the Republican majority stands idly by, forfeiting their authority as a co-equal branch of government.” DeLauro pointed to language in a 2026 appropriations measure enacted earlier this year that prohibits the Education Department from transferring responsibilities to other federal agencies without congressional approval.“This is a disgraceful violation of the law,” DeLauro said Tuesday. “By moving special education from the Department of Education to the Department of Health and Human Services, the administration is taking us back to a dark period in American history. One where individuals with disabilities were viewed not as whole persons deserving of an education, but as medical patients whose education is not a priority.”The top Democratic appropriator in the Senate, Patty Murray of Washington, warned that “the Trump administration is abandoning kids with disabilities and its most basic legal responsibility to protect the rights of every student in the classroom.”“Instead of helping kids get a great education, this administration is spending its time, energy, and taxpayer resources fixated on where employees sit and illegally trying to shutter the...
Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) sharply criticized President Trump on Wednesday for the delaying the nomination of Jay Clayton to be director of national intelligence (DNI). “What we’re witnessing is an extraordinary display of dysfunction from a president who seems determined to turn America’s national security into a political bargaining chip,” Warner, the top Democrat on…
President Donald Trump criticized Israel for its strikes targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon during his remarks on the final day of conclusion of the G7 summit.
Republicans in Congress are "quietly" mounting a rebellion against President Donald Trump's snubbing of NATO allies, according to The Hill, seeking to "take back influence" of the situation by using legislation.In a report published Wednesday morning, The Hill revealed that lawmakers in the Senate are pushing back against Trump's recent decision to abruptly withdraw troops from NATO ally countries in Europe. Those widely derided decisions came amid the backdrop of Trump's longstanding disdain for NATO, having long criticized other members for, in his eyes, not doing enough and relying on U.S. protection. Some of these troop drawdowns also seem to have come in response to certain European leaders hurting Trump's feelings."The Senate Armed Services Committee is moving to curb President Trump’s power to remove troops from Europe, as the White House reportedly plans to draw down its commitment of air support to European countries," The Hill explained. "The annual defense policy bill contains several provisions that would prevent the Pentagon from using funds to reduce the number of American troops in Europe below 76,000 without providing Congress with a justification well beforehand. It comes as Trump has, in recent weeks, moved to cancel deployments of troops headed for Germany and Poland."Sen. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the committee who has recently come under fire from Trump, told the outlet that Republican members are supportive of these provisions, "because they, too, want to keep supporting NATO with consistent American troops."“All of us recognize the critical nature of NATO in terms of global stability, and many of the things the president is doing is undermining our relationship with NATO and our ability to deter the Russians,” Reed said. “We’re sending a clear signal… we have to maintain that posture to maintain peace.”Sen. Mike Rounds, a South Dakota Republican, stressed how important the matter is among the GOP in Congress, making it clear why they are not afraid of hitting back against Trump on the matter.“It was not a controversial issue,” Rounds said. “It’s very well supported within Congress. We recognize how important it is to have a strong message to our NATO allies that we’re still good partners, and that what President Trump wanted from day one was to have them be even stronger partners and to contribute more to their own defense, and they’re doing that.”
At the conclusion of the G7 assembly in France, President Trump is scheduled to hold a very consequential press conference. The anticipated start time is 11:00am ET; however, the timing is estimated with ongoing events. Livestream Links below: . . . Posted in G7, President Trump, Press Secretary - Trump The post President Trump Holds Very Important G7 Press Conference – 11:00am ET Livestream appeared first on The Last Refuge.
Racism, according to Merriam-Webster, includes "the systemic oppression of a racial group to the social, economic, and political advantage of another." By that definition, the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights (OCR), which by law could not protect Christians from religious discrimination and by practice deprioritized complaints from white students for decades, qualified as racism, funded with public monies. The post Trump Administration Moves Biased Civil Rights Out of Department of Education appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.