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Jimmy Failla & Kennedy Look Back On Some Of The Most Brazen Examples Of The Media's Biden Cover-Up

Jimmy Failla & Kennedy Look Back On Some Of The Most Brazen Examples Of The Media's Biden Cover-Up

Fox News30-04-2025

Host of the 'Kennedy Saves The World' podcast Kennedy joins Fox Across America With Jimmy Failla to share her thoughts on Axios reporter Alex Thompson calling out the media for being complicit in the cover-up of former President Biden's cognitive decline.
PLUS, check out the podcast if you missed any of Wednesday's show!

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Biden book author reveals how White House staff truly felt about Karine Jean-Pierre as press secretary
Biden book author reveals how White House staff truly felt about Karine Jean-Pierre as press secretary

Fox News

time26 minutes ago

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Biden book author reveals how White House staff truly felt about Karine Jean-Pierre as press secretary

CHICAGO - One of the authors of the new bombshell Joe Biden book pulled back the curtain Thursday on how White House staffers truly felt about former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre. During their book tour in Chicago, "Original Sin" authors Alex Thompson and Jake Tapper were asked about the announcement of Jean-Pierre's new book promising to shed light on the "broken White House" she worked in and that she left the Democratic Party to become an independent. "Someone just texted me before I got on stage, a former Biden person, which is, 'It is quite the ballet move to say that you're leaving the Democratic Party because they were disloyal to Joe Biden.' But that is what she's saying," Thompson told the Windy City audience Thursday at The Vic Theatre. Thompson noted that despite "mass bad reviews" within the Biden administration of Jean-Pierre's job performance as White House press secretary, she was seen as "untouchable" due to her allyship with top Jill Biden aide Anthony Bernal. "I think what's really provoking anger from former Biden people… there was mass frustration on how she went about the job, felt that she was not good at it, was not aware she was not good at it, she did not try hard to get better at it. And there's more focus on elevating her own profile than not," Thompson said. "And now for her to then go out after the Democratic Party elevated her to the top spokesperson job in the country and then for her to then try to sell books by leaving the party, they say that simmering resentment just exploded instantly," the Axios reporter added. Tapper speculated that there would have been less "scorn" aimed at Jean-Pierre if she didn't announce she had become an independent, something the CNN anchor made little sense to him. The event moderator, NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik, asked Tapper and Thompson why former Biden staffers by and large "aren't using their names" as they criticize Jean-Pierre. "I totally wonder that too," Tapper reacted. "Because, like, what are you afraid of?" Thompson responded by insisting many of them don't want to speak publicly because they have since landed new jobs and don't want their employers to be associated with the mudslinging. "I'd also say that the Biden culture was to punish and try to destroy people who spoke out," Thompson said. "And yes, they don't have power anymore, but they are watching very closely. I think some people still fear retaliation." Tapper added that since Jean-Pierre was a trailblazer" as the first Black woman and LGBTQ press secretary, that was another reason why her former colleagues aren't speaking out. Both authors took turns scrutinizing Jean-Pierre's credibility following her loyal defense of Biden before and after his disastrous debate performance. Tapper recalled a 2023 private fundraiser Biden attended in which he didn't have a teleprompter and how he told donors his canned remarks about how the events of Charlottesville inspired his presidential run in 2020 twice in the span of a few minutes, and how at the following press briefing, Jean-Pierre told reporters, "Well, that's how strongly he feels about that moment." "In her defense, she rarely saw him," Tapper quipped.

Georgia is an immigration enforcement hot spot
Georgia is an immigration enforcement hot spot

Axios

time2 hours ago

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Georgia is an immigration enforcement hot spot

Efforts to arrest and remove unauthorized immigrants appear most aggressive in Georgia and other southern states with Democratic-leaning cities, while deeply red, rural states are seeing less activity, according to an Axios analysis. Why it matters: Our review of removal orders, pending deportation cases and agreements between immigration officials and local law enforcement agencies sheds light on where the Trump administration is dispatching resources to support its mass deportation plan. The analysis shows local law enforcement agencies here and in Texas, Florida, North Carolina and Virginia have been most cooperative with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in rounding up immigrants through deals known as 287 (g) agreements. There are 629 such agreements now in place across the country. About 43% of them are in Florida, followed by 14% in Texas and 5% in Georgia. Zoom in: The death of Laken Riley, a nursing student who was killed in Athens by an undocumented immigrant, spurred Gov. Brian Kemp and Republican state lawmakers to push local governments to partner with federal immigration efforts. In March, Kemp directed Georgia Department of Public Safety Commissioner Billy Hitchens to ask ICE to train the force's 1,100 sworn officers under the 287 (g) program. The Georgia Senate earlier this year passed legislation to waive sovereign immunity for "sanctuary cities" that do not enforce immigration laws. The bill awaits a vote in the state House. Reality check: Sanctuary cities — local governments that do not assist with federal immigration enforcement — have been prohibited in Georgia since 2009. Zoom out: Federal agents also have been especially active in New York, California and Illinois — blue states where some local and state laws prohibit authorities from assisting in immigration arrests. By the numbers: Of the 42,000 removals of immigrants ordered in March, nearly 50% involved people in Texas, California, New York, Virginia and Florida, according to an analysis of data from the nonpartisan Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC). The big picture: The data analyzed by Axios and the locations of the agreements between federal and local authorities reflect a few simple truths about immigration enforcement across the U.S. There aren't nearly enough federal agents to meet President Trump's unprecedented deportation goal of deporting a million immigrants a year. In some places where the Trump administration faces a gap in resources, local law enforcement agencies are unable or unwilling to meet the feds' demands or expand beyond their usual enforcement duties. With the nation's borders essentially locked down, the administration has shifted much of its deportation operations to the nation's interior. National Sheriffs' Association executive director and CEO Jonathan Thompson said some sheriffs are concerned that their departments could undermine their communities' trust by working with ICE. "What I've heard them say is, if you're going to take somebody out of the community, do it in a way that demonstrates due process," he said. There is a cost to these arrests, Thompson said. "It costs the community because [an arrested immigrant] may be a contributing member ... to the fabric of the community." Catch up quick: Metro Atlanta sheriffs, including Cobb County's Craig D. Owens Sr. and Gwinnett's Keybo Taylor, won their elections pledging to end 287 (g) partnerships after taking office. The result, they told Axios in 2022, made communities safer; Taylor said he redirected some of the $3 million spent on 287 (g) toward combating human trafficking and gang violence. What they're saying: Trump border czar Tom Homan, a former ICE director, told Axios he rejects the notion that working with immigration officials can undermine community trust in local authorities.

Virginia is a hot spot for immigration enforcement and more state headlines
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Virginia is a hot spot for immigration enforcement and more state headlines

The state Capitol. (Photo by Ned Oliver/Virginia Mercury) • 'Virginia is a hot spot for immigration enforcement.' — Axios • 'Democratic candidates for lieutenant governor talk about how they'd fight Trump while working with Republican legislators from rural Virginia.' — Cardinal News • 'Will the Republican statewide ticket appear together this election cycle?' — WVTF • ''We're not interested in collecting revenue': Fairfax Co. board chairman says more speed cameras are being installed.' — WTOP • 'Replica gun recovered after 18-year-old shot by Virginia Beach police, authorities say.' — 13newsnow SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

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