logo
JD Vance says it was ‘very cool' to have Disneyland shut down for his family vacation - but apologizes for ‘longer lines'

JD Vance says it was ‘very cool' to have Disneyland shut down for his family vacation - but apologizes for ‘longer lines'

Independenta day ago
Vice President JD Vance is sorry — but not that sorry — for any disruptions his July family trip to Disneyland in California may have caused.
'We had the island to ourselves which was very cool. I had never been to Disneyland. I thought it was awesome,' Vance said during an episode of the Katie Miller Podcast that aired on Monday.
Speaking with Miller, a former Trump White House official who is married to current deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, Vance apologized to those impacted by the security preparations for his visit.
'Sorry to all the people who were at Disneyland for the longer lines, but we had a very good time,' the vice president said with a smile, holding up his hands in mock defense.
But Vance's visit to the Anaheim park was met with more than just lengthy lines.
Hundreds protested his presence at Disneyland, which came as Trump administration immigration officials and federal troops were helping conduct and secure deportation raids across the Los Angeles area.
It's not the only recent Vance visit that has ruffled local feathers.
Earlier this month The Guardian was first to report that authorities traveling with Vance requested the water levels be raised in an Ohio river to accommodate a kayaking trip for the VP's 41st birthday.
Vance's office said the Secret Service requested the change in flow into the Little Miami River without his knowledge.
A source familiar with the request told The Independent at the time that the ask was made for security reasons after a boat ran aground during an advance scouting trip.
'The Secret Service often employs protective measures without the knowledge of the Vice President or his staff, as was the case last weekend,' a spokesperson told The Independent.
Vance is currently in the U.K., where he has mixed another vacation with diplomacy.
He spent the weekend with foreign secretary David Lammy at his official country estate in Chevening, Kent, and is currently vacationing at a holiday retreat in the Cotswolds.
The vice president's presence in the countryside has reportedly caused what locals called a ' circus ' of security preparations including road closures, police door knocks, and official vehicles driving on crammed back streets.
An Oxfordshire resident told The Observer locals were 'used to seeing police around' in the scenic part of the country — which has played host to U.S. celebrities such as Beyoncé, Jay-Z, and Taylor Swift — but there has been 'nothing like this.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump claims Schiff leaked classified information to damage him
Trump claims Schiff leaked classified information to damage him

Daily Mail​

timea few seconds ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump claims Schiff leaked classified information to damage him

Donald Trump ripped into one of his longtime Democratic opponents claiming he leaked classified information to damage him, and he wants the Department of Justice to investigate. 'Just out, irrefutable proof that Adam Shifty Schiff 'approved plan to leak classified information to damage Donald Trump,'' the president wrote on Truth Social Wednesday. He was reacting to reports about a whistleblower alleging that California Sen. Adam Schiff hatched a plan to leak classified intelligence to damage Trump shortly after he first took office in 2017. The whistleblower claims Schiff personally authorized a plan to selectively leak damaging information about Trump to the media during the FBI 's investigation into the president's possible ties to Russia . Later in the day, at an event at the Kennedy Center, the president slammed Schiff again. 'I told him ( Putin ), you know, they got this phony investigation going on. Russia, Russia, Russia. Totally phony, created by Adam Schiff,' the 79-year-old recounted. 'Shifty Schiff and Hillary Clinton and the whole group of them ... made it very dangerous for our country,' the president continued. 'I'm looking at Pam, because I hope something's going to be done about it,' he added. 'Now we've learned all the stuff that's come out over the last two months is incredible, through intelligence. And hopefully something's gonna happen with it.' A spokesperson for Schiff hit back at the allegations in a statement to the Daily Mail. 'Kash Patel's latest smear against Senator Schiff is absolutely and categorically false, and is just the latest in a series of defamatory attacks from the President and his allies meant to distract from their plummeting poll numbers and the Epstein files scandal,' they said. 'These baseless smears are based on allegations that were found to be not reliable, not credible, and unsubstantiated from a disgruntled former staffer who was fired by the House Intelligence Committee for cause in early 2017, including for harassment and potentially compromising activity on official travel for the Committee.' New testimony revealed in FBI documents shows that a career Democrat intelligence official believed Schiff's leaking to the press was 'illegal' and 'treasonous,' according to documents first reported by Just the News . 'When working in this capacity, [redacted staffer's name] was called to an all-staff meeting by SCHIFF,' the FBI report said. 'In this meeting, Schiff stated the group would leak classified information which was derogatory to President of the United States Donald J. Trump. Schiff stated the information would be used to indict President Trump.' The whistleblower gave the testimony at the FBI's St. Louis field office in 2023. However, according to the outlet, the whistleblower had told FBI officials in Washington as early as 2017 about Schiff's plot. The whistleblower reportedly said during the meeting, 'this would be illegal and, upon hearing his concerns, unnamed members of the meeting reassured that they would not be caught leaking classified information,' the report states. According to the testimony, Schiff believed he would be saved from prosecution due to the Constitution's speech and debate clause. The statute protects members of Congress from legal action for actions taken during their legislative work. It is unclear whether Attorney General Pam Bondi is working on charges related to Schiff's plan to leak classified material.

Trump administration ordered to restore some withheld grant funding to UCLA
Trump administration ordered to restore some withheld grant funding to UCLA

The Independent

time2 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump administration ordered to restore some withheld grant funding to UCLA

A federal judge has ordered the Trump administration to restore millions of dollars in National Science Foundation grants it has withheld from the University of California, Los Angeles, saying they were made in violation of her earlier court ruling. U.S. District Judge Rita F. Lin ruled late Tuesday that the NSF must reinstate the research grants that were suspended for reasons she had already ruled 'arbitrary and capricious,' and gave the administration until Aug. 19 to show compliance or explain why it hasn't restored the money. It was not immediately clear how much funding could be returned to UCLA. The school's chancellor said last week that the Trump administration has pulled $584 million in federal grants from various federal agencies. The judge's ruling applies specifically to NSF grants. UCLA's money as been frozen as part of a wider pressure campaign targeting universities that Trump says are out of step with his political agenda. University of California researchers challenged the cuts as 'abrupt and unexplained' and won a preliminary injunction in June from Lin, who ruled that the NSF and other agencies could not terminate grant funding without specifically explaining why. But on July 30, the NSF sent out a new round of letters that Lin described as 'en masse, form letter funding cuts.' One said the awards 'no longer effectuate program goals or agency priorities." Another cited allegations of racism, antisemitism and policies around transgender athletes at UCLA. It did not elaborate. The administration argued in a Tuesday hearing that the UCLA funding cuts were 'suspensions' rather than 'terminations.' Lin dismissed this as semantics. 'NSF's indefinite suspensions differ from a termination in name only,' and the reasons the agency provided are based on 'the same type of deficient explanations as the original terminations,' she ruled. The university issued a brief statement praising the decision, saying that 'restoration of National Science Foundation funds is critical to research the University of California performs on behalf of California and the Nation.' UCLA also faces a Trump administration demand to pay $1 billion to settle antisemitism allegations. UCLA became the first public university to be targeted as the administration seeks to dominate academic institutions around the country. ___ The Associated Press' education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at

Report: Kari Lake attempting to deport VOA foreign journalists
Report: Kari Lake attempting to deport VOA foreign journalists

Daily Mail​

time3 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Report: Kari Lake attempting to deport VOA foreign journalists

Voice of America's foreign journalists are grappling with unprecedented deportation efforts by their new boss. Kari Lake was tapped in February to serve as senior advisor of the United States Agency for Global Media and ultimately shut down the government-funded international broadcaster that employs a trifecta of ire for President Donald Trump – federal workers, immigrants, and journalists. After firing hundreds and decimating international broadcasters, Lake is now on a mission to force these former J-1 visa holders out of the country, according to a new report by The Atlantic. She claims they are as much of a threat as criminal illegal aliens and gang members. Going onto conservative media outlets in recent weeks, Lake noted how those who lost their jobs at Voice of America (VOA) in recent months but remain in the U.S. with an expired work visa will be targeted by Trump's mass deportation efforts. 'Their time here is up,' Lake told Real America's Voice host Eric Bolling when speaking of anyone living in the U.S. without documentation. 'And I said before, if I have to go to the airport with them, and accompany them to the airport and get them on the flight, I will do that.' Lake warned: 'If you overstay your visa, ICE is going to find you. And they will find you in this case as well.' Even with the endorsement of Trump, Lake failed in her Arizona gubernatorial and U.S. Senate campaigns in 2021 and 2024, respectively. Trump tapped the former broadcast journalist to run the federal parent of VOA as he sought to shut it down. J-1 visas are a nonimmigrant visa for foreign individuals approved to work and study in the U.S. on exchange visitor programs. The visa holders are usually sponsored by educational or non-profit organizations. The Trump administration has included foreign workers on visas in its wider immigration crackdown. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem threatened to revoke Harvard's ability to host international students if they did not turn over a list of foreign student visa holders. VOA was one of the government-funded agencies to face widespread cuts once Trump got back into office. As a condition of their J-1 visas, foreign workers for the broadcaster needed to remain employed by the U.S. Agency for Global Media or else depart the U.S. within 30 days. Dozens of J-1 visa holders who worked as translators and foreign-language broadcasters lost their jobs in the gutting of VOA this year, leaving their ability to stay in the U.S. up-in-the-air. Since landing at the U.S. Agency for Global Media Lake moved to eliminate the agency's independent broadcasters that receive government funding, including Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and the Middle East Broadcasting Networks. Only a few dozen people work at VOA today, down from more than 1,300 before Trump retook office in January. It has downsized from broadcasting in 50 languages to just a handful. While some VOA workers have already left the country, others are claiming asylum and a few quickly married or enrolled in school to avoid being deported to countries where they may no longer be welcome, The Atlantic reported. Some of these reporters, who now have the U.S. government as an employer on their resumés, could face persecution or even imprisonment if they are deported to their home nations. Publicly, Lake described VOA as 'rotten to the core' and 'a serious threat to our national security.' VOA was founded in 1942 as a counterpoint to Nazi propaganda during World War II. Of Lake's recent comments about deporting her former employees, Steve Herman, a VOA retiree said: 'That sort of rhetoric—it's utter nonsense.' 'To perceive these people as a national-security threat is just ridiculous,' the former VOA White House bureau chief added. 'In fact, it can be argued that those responsible for dismantling the Voice of America have harmed America's national security by taking away one of our most powerful instruments of public diplomacy and soft power.' The significance of VOA's mission became clear during this summer's escalating conflict between Israel and Iran, when dozens of staffers were recalled to restore the Persian news division's critical broadcasts.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store