
Trump's border wall gets hot new upgrade and more top headlines
2. Hot mic moment between Trump and Macron
3. Blue state AG warns police they'll 'regret' arresting her in viral video
ON ALERT – Hurricane Erin unleashes massive waves, extreme coastal impacts along East Coast. Continue reading …
PRIVILEGE REVOKED – Former Obama officials stripped of clearances as Gabbard exposes 'betrayal.' Continue reading …
HIGH TENSION – Bryan Kohberger prosecutor breaks silence on key hearing that crushed killer's defense. Continue reading …
PREDATOR PATTERN – Blue city rattled as alleged serial attacker preys on women in ritzy neighborhood. Continue reading …
WOKE OVERREACH – Parents outraged as school punishes boys over trans locker room confrontation. Continue reading …
--
SHORT AND SWEET – The Supreme Court's 'most interesting justice' leaves crowd puzzled after brief remarks. Continue reading …
COURT COSTS – Preemptively pardoned Schiff launches legal defense fund under Trump admin. Continue reading …
NEXT STEPS – Republicans and Democrats battle over House seats before 2026 midterms. Continue reading …
RADICAL SHUTDOWN – 'Far Left agitators' boo Trump's House GOP ally offstage at event. Continue reading …
DEI TARGET – White CBS anchor claims she was demoted due to diversity quotas lawsuit. Continue reading …
RETURN TO SENDER – 'The View' co-host mocks first lady's peace plea to Putin. Continue reading …
CREATURE CONSPIRACY – Red-eyed monster that 'kept pace with car going 100 mph' haunts small town. Continue reading …
CALIFORNIA LEAVIN' – Pastor warns families to flee state if Newsom signs 'dangerous' bill. Continue reading …
BILLY MCLAUGHLIN – I made memes for the White House. Here's what I learned. Continue reading …
DAN GAINOR – Leftist MSNBC changes its name, but it's still the same embarrassment. Continue reading …
--
TOXIC IMPORT – Radioactive material discovered in food sold at Walmart. Continue reading …
SODA SWAP – Costco's Pepsi-to-Coke switch goes viral as members sound off. Continue reading …
AMERICAN CULTURE QUIZ – Test yourself on vintage vehicles and carnival crowds. Take the quiz here …
BURIED SPLENDOR – 1,700-year-old Roman bathhouse unearthed by archaeologists after surprise discovery. Continue reading …
CALM DOWN – Brain expert reveals best advice for calming mind and body. See video …
STEPHEN A. SMITH – Trump has done more than any administration to end world conflicts. See video …
JAMES CARVILLE – Democrats need a presidential nominee. See video …
Tune in to the FOX NEWS RUNDOWN PODCAST for today's in-depth reporting on the news that impacts you. Check it out ...
What's it looking like in your neighborhood? Continue reading…
Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We'll see you in your inbox first thing Thursday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Vance leans into DC crime fight in Georgia
Vice President JD Vance on Thursday took the White House's fiery crime crackdown on the road, casting another Black-led city in apocalyptic terms on a trip that was designed to tout tax cuts and other administration policies. Vance was in Peachtree City, Georgia, a purple Atlanta suburb, to sell the White House's One Big Beautiful Bill — since rebranded the Working Families Tax Cut — as a win for the working-class. Speaking from a refrigeration equipment manufacturer whose products end up in Chick-fil-A restaurants, the vice president extolled the GOP's marquee legislation for slashing taxes on tips and overtime and bolstering American manufacturing — the same messaging he's used during similar events this summer at a machine shop in Pennsylvania and a steel facility in Ohio, but now with a new name. But in the firehose of President Donald Trump's Washington, the megalaw — which Trump signed on July 4 — was no longer the story of the summer. Attention has since shifted to Trump's takeover of Washington, which the president celebrated by visiting National Guard troops and federal officers the same day his vice president was in Georgia. Vance decided to lean in. 'I want you to be able to go shopping, or go and get a nice meal with your family, without the fear that you're going to get mugged or even worse because you had the audacity to take your family out for a day in one of our great American cities,' Vance said. Trump and Vance have long described the country's urban centers — which tend to be deeply Democratic and ethnically diverse — as sites of danger, deviance and decay. Trump has referred to New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago — America's three most populous cities — as 'warzones.' And last week, when the president announced his crackdown on Washington, he put Baltimore, Maryland, and Oakland, California, on notice, saying 'they're so far gone.' 'We're not going to lose our cities over this,' Trump said. 'And this will go further. We're starting very strongly with D.C.' On Thursday, in Peachtree City, about 30 miles outside Atlanta, Vance painted the southern city as a place where families cower in fear of criminals and 'cross the street' to 'avoid a crazy person yelling.' 'Those are your streets, paid for with your tax dollars, and you ought to be able to use them like any other citizen of this country,' Vance said. The vice president acknowledged that the administration has focused on Washington because of Trump's unique power over it as a federal city, but said, 'We certainly hope, whether it's Atlanta or anywhere else, people are gonna look around and say, 'We don't have to live like this.'' Critics say Trump and Vance's rhetoric about urban crime has racial undertones, and the six cities he named explicitly in his news conference last week are led by Black mayors. But the White House is attempting to defend its position by slamming detractors for being white. When Vance, alongside Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and top White House aide Stephen Miller, were heckled by protesters Wednesday in Union Station, the vice president said they were 'old, primarily white people' who have 'never felt danger in their entire lives.' Vance continued that tactic Thursday. Bashing the racial justice protests in 2020, which led to major anti-police sentiment in the Democratic Party, Vance said it was 'disproportionately Black Atlantans who suffer the most from high violent crime.' Asked about the historical pain associated with homeless people who were swept off Atlanta's streets in preparation for the 1996 Summer Olympics, Vance first reminded the local reporter that he had been 12 years old at the time. 'I was worried about football and fishing,' he said. But, the vice president added, 'the question betrays the question of what we're trying to do, and what is the nature of true compassion.' 'Why have we convinced ourselves that it's compassionate to allow a person who's obviously a schizophrenic or suffering from some other mental illness, why is it compassionate to let that person fester in the streets?' he said. The 'compassionate thing to do,' Vance continued, was to 'get them in treatment, not to let them sit on the streets and yell at our people while they're walking by.' The vice president has spoken before about compassion in policy. He argued in January that 'your compassion belongs first to your fellow citizens,' citing an ancient Catholic concept called ordo amoris. The late Pope Francis later took issue with Vance's understanding of the concept in an unusual public rebuke of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. Vance on Thursday appeared to blend his conception of compassion, passion for nativism and suggestion that people with generational roots in the country have a greater claim over its privileges of citizenship to sell a greater crime crackdown. 'This country was built by your grandparents, by your parents, by your forebearers — you ought to have the right to live a good life in this country,' he said. He added: 'The people who built Atlanta did not build it so that you would not be able to walk down the streets of Atlanta safely at night. They built it so you could enjoy it.'


CBS News
3 minutes ago
- CBS News
National Guard member ticketed for running a red light after crashing into car in D.C. during Trump's deployment
A National Guard member whose military transport vehicle collided with a car this week was given a traffic ticket for running a red light in Washington, D.C. — as Guard forces deploy to the streets of the capital amid President Trump's contentious anti-crime push. The collision took place early Wednesday morning, as a convoy of five National Guard vehicles drove through D.C.'s Capitol Hill neighborhood. One of the trucks — a Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected All-Terrain Vehicle — struck a civilian car, the D.C. Guard said in a statement. The five Guard vehicles and a D.C. Metropolitan Police Department cruiser stopped to help the driver, who was transported via emergency medical services, according to the Guard. The driver sustained minor injuries, but the D.C. Fire Department used extrication tools to remove the driver from the car, department spokesperson Vito Maggiolo told CBS News. The driver of the Guard vehicle was later ticketed for running a red light during the incident, the military's D.C. Joint Task Force said Thursday. Red light tickets cost $150 in D.C. "Our priority is ensuring the well-being of all involved. We are grateful for the response of D.C. police and EMS. Safety is our top priority. We will take action based on the investigation. This type of vehicle is authorized, and safety protocols are in place," Army Col. Larry Doane, commander of the joint task force for D.C., said in a statement. National Guard personnel have been deployed in the capital city since last week, when Mr. Trump ordered the D.C. Guard — which is controlled by the president — to crack down on what he called an "epidemic of crime." Federal agents have also patrolled the city, and Mr. Trump has asserted control over the local Metropolitan Police Department. Just under 2,000 Guard personnel were activated in the capital as of Wednesday, including members of the D.C. National Guard as well as forces from six GOP-led states. The Guard members "may be armed, consistent with their training, depending on the mission, operating under civilian law enforcement," the Joint Task Force said in a statement. Guard forces and heavy military vehicles have been spotted throughout the city, including at Union Station and near the Washington Monument. The moves have drawn pushback from local officials who argue the surge is unnecessary. Violent crime in D.C. has been declining for the last year-and-a-half after spiking in 2023, according to local police data — despite Mr. Trump's claim that crime is on the Walsh contributed to this report.


The Hill
4 minutes ago
- The Hill
US says it killed top ISIS official in Syria
U.S. forces on Tuesday killed a senior ISIS official in Syria, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) announced in a statement Thursday. The 'successful raid' in northern Syria targeted an unnamed senior ISIS member who also served as a 'key financier who planned attacks in Syria and Iraq,' according to the CENTCOM statement. CENTCOM said the senior ISIS member had relationships in the region, 'posing a direct threat to U.S. and Coalition forces and the new Syrian Government.' 'We will continue to pursue ISIS terrorists with unwavering determination, throughout the region,' CENTCOM Commander, Adm. Brad Cooper, said in the statement. 'Together with our partners and allies, CENTCOM remains steadfast in our commitment of ensuring the lasting defeat of ISIS and the protection of the U.S. homeland,' he continued. Trump has moved to ease sanctions significantly on Syria in the wake of the ousting of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad in December. A delegation of Congressional members recently visited Syria and met with President Ahmed al-Sharaa and other senior officials in the administration. CENTCOM forces last month killed another senior ISIS leader, Dhiya' Zawba Muslih al-Hardani, and his two adult ISIS-affiliated sons, Abdallah Dhiya al-Hardani and Abd al-Rahman Dhiya Zawba al-Hardani. U.S. officials similarly said the ISIS members posed a threat to US and coalition forces, including the Syrian government.