
Coming up on ‘Fox News Sunday': August 17, 2025
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
A look at Texas' redistricting walkout and California's response, by the numbers
A walkout by Democratic legislators in Texas has ended and Republicans arranged to push a plan for redrawing the state's congressional districts through the GOP-controlled Legislature and give President Donald Trump a better political landscape. Democrats' boycott of daily sessions kept the House from passing a new map because the state constitution requires 100 of the chamber's 150 members to be present to do business. Democrats hold 62 seats. A national, partisan brawl over redistricting has now started to shift to California, where Democrats are hoping to impose a new map that offsets any advantage Trump and his fellow Republicans might gain in Texas. Here's a breakdown by the numbers. 5 more seats sought by Texas Republicans Texas is the nation's second most-populous state and has 38 congressional seats. Republicans hold 25 of them but are hoping to boost that number to 30. Their goal is to make it easier for the GOP to hold on to its slim U.S. House majority in the 2026 midterm elections, so that Democrats have little ability to thwart Trump's agenda and can't initiate investigations of his administration. 48 is the Democrats' goal for seats in California Democrats hold 43 of 52 congressional seats in California, the nation's most populous state. At Gov. Gavin Newsom's urging, they've drafted a proposal to increase the number to 48. However, the current map was drawn by an independent commission created though a voter-approved ballot initiative in 2008. To avoid legal challenges, Democrats want to put their proposal on the ballot in a special election in November. 10 years between typical map redrawings Redistricting usually happens after the once-a-decade population count by the U.S. Census Bureau and sometimes in response to a court ruling. Changes are required to keep a state's congressional districts equal in population after people move into or out of an area. Trump is pushing for a rare mid-decade redistricting in Texas, and Republicans are also considering it in other states including Missouri, Florida and Indiana. 7 seats is the size of the GOP's US House majority Republicans currently hold 219 seats in the U.S. House, seven more than the 212 held by Democrats. Four of the chamber's 435 seats are vacant, three of them previously held by Democrats. Midterm elections most often go against the president's party. In 2018, during Trump's first term, Democrats had a net gain of 41 seats to capture the House majority. 15 days before Texas Democrats returned home Most House Democrats left Texas on Aug. 3 and stayed outside the state for 15 days. They fled to blue states like Illinois, California and Massachusetts to stay out of the reach of the Texas law enforcement officers trying to bring them back. Many of the same lawmakers also walked out in 2021 for 38 days to protest GOP proposals for new voting restrictions. Once they returned, Republicans passed them into law. 24 hours a day of police escort for Democrats The Democrats who bolted for other states and returned now have an around-the-clock escort from Texas Department of Public Safety officers to make sure they return to the Capitol, House Speaker Dustin Burrows' office said. Burrows' office did not provide more details, calling it an ongoing law enforcement operation. Plainclothes officers escorted them from the chamber after Monday's session.
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Judge issues injunction preventing Trump's FTC from investigating watchdog Media Matters
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge has issued an injunction preventing the Trump administration's Federal Trade Commission from investigating Media Matters for America, the liberal media watchdog group that had alleged the spread of hate speech on X since Elon Musk acquired the social media platform. U.S. District Court Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan ruled Friday that the FTC's probe of Media Matters, 'purportedly to investigate an advertiser boycott concerning social media platforms,' represents a clear violation of the group's freedom of speech. 'It should alarm all Americans when the government retaliates against individuals or organizations for engaging in constitutionally protected public debate,' Sooknanan wrote. Even before the FTC got involved, Media Matters has been defending itself against a lawsuit by Elon Musk following the organization's November 2023 story that, following Musk's purchase of the social media site once known as Twitter, antisemitic posts and other offensive content were appearing next to advertisements there. Sooknanan said the injunction halting any FTC probe was merited because Media Matters is likely to succeed on its claim that the FTC is being used to retaliate against it for a critical article on a Trump supporter. 'The court's ruling demonstrates the importance of fighting over folding, which far too many are doing when confronted with intimidation from the Trump administration,' said Angelo Carusone, chairman and president of Media Matters. There was no immediate comment from an FTC spokesman.


WIRED
22 minutes ago
- WIRED
An Account Using the Same Name as Trump's BLS Pick Posted Red-Pilled Conspiracy Theories
Aug 18, 2025 5:25 PM A WIRED review of a now-deleted Twitter account that used the screen name 'Dr. Erwin J. Antoni III' shows it posted conspiratorial content about the 2020 election, Covid-19, and Jeffrey Epstein. Photograph Courtesy of The White House In the months leading up to the January 6 Capitol riot, a now-deleted Twitter account bearing the full name of E.J. Antoni, President Donald Trump's pick to run the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), betrayed a seeming obsession with promoting election denial conspiracy theories while talking about violent threats to those who stood in Trump's way. The account, which used 'Dr. Erwin J. Antoni III' as its screen name for a time, was linked by the conservative Heartland Institute think tank when referring to Antoni in a 2020 post on Twitter promoting one of its own YouTube videos in which he appeared. A WIRED review of an archive of the account's posts shows that in the months leading up to the attack on the Capitol, it spread baseless conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and shared content from The Donald, a virulently pro-Trump message board that was used to organize the events of Jan 6, 2021. One of the final posts on the now-deleted account used violent religious rhetoric in the hours before the assault on the Capitol began. 'Samson has his arms around the temple pillars, and though he may not survive, he will bring it all down on his enemies,' the account posted late on January 5, 2021, in response to a Twitter post from Trump calling on Republicans to 'FIGHT.' Last week, an NBC investigation uncovered video footage showing Antoni near the Capitol on January 6, 2021. The White House confirmed to NBC that it was Antoni, adding that he was merely a 'bystander' who was in Washington, DC, for meetings and had wandered over after seeing coverage of the incident on the news. The White House declined to answer WIRED's questions about the account and its relationship to Antoni. When asked to comment on the account's postings, Antoni did not respond. Antoni was nominated for the role of BLS commissioner after Trump fired Erika McEntarfer on August 1, claiming without evidence that she had purportedly 'rigged' an updated jobs report that suggested the US economy was not as hot as Trump has repeatedly claimed. His main qualification for the job appears to be that he is the chief economist for the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank behind Project 2025, a policy blueprint that Antoni contributed to. But his nomination has been widely criticized by Antoni's fellow economists, who cite his lack of relevant experience and what they allege to be errors in his public comments on economic data. 'I've been on several programs with him at this point and have been impressed by two things: his inability to understand basic economics and the speed with which he's gone MAGA,' Dave Herbert, an economist at the conservative American Institute for Economic Research, wrote on X. While Antoni's current X account—which is almost exclusively filled with economic data and analysis—shows little sign of MAGA credentials, the now-deleted Twitter account bearing his name is filled with deeply red-pilled content. The account was active at least between September 2019 and January 2021, and had the username @PhDofbombsaway. It used several different screen names, including 'Dr. Erwin J. Antoni III' and 'Dr. Curtis LeMay,' an apparent reference to the US Air Force general who oversaw a campaign of firebombing Japan in World War II, promoted the use of nuclear weapons, and ran for the vice presidency alongside segregationist George Wallace in 1968. The account's profile picture was a stock image of a fiery mushroom cloud. The account's persona was that of a deeply loyal Trump supporter engaging in conspiracy theories ranging from Covid denialism to attacks on Black Lives Matter, and even ones related to the death of Jeffrey Epstein. The posting, which was infused with a deeply hardline Catholic worldview, at times displayed misogyny and a knowledge of Nazi military techniques. The account posted a mixture of conspiracy theories and pro-Trump MAGA content, sharing a veritable who's who of right-wing influencer accounts, including Jack Posobiec, Mark Dice, James O'Keefe, Scott Adams, Cassandra MacDonald, Steven Crowder, James Woods and Robby Starbuck. Throughout 2020, the account shared Covid conspiracy theories, especially focusing on the claims that China had purposely manufactured the virus to destroy its enemies. In February 2020, responding to a posting asking how many nuclear bombs America should drop on China if it turns out the country was responsible for Covid-19, the account—which was using the 'Dr. Curtis LeMay' screen name, according to captures from the Internet Archive—wrote 'All the bombs—trust me, I'm kind of the expert on this.' The account posted a wide variety of conspiratorial content, as well as misogynistic content. In November 2019, for example, the person controlling the account claimed that Jeffrey Epstein 'didn't kill himself.' That same month, in response to a post about then-presidential candidate Kamala Harris, they wrote 'She does her best work when life brings her to her knees.' But the account was most consistently vocal in its embrace of the conspiracy theory that Joe Biden stole the 2020 presidential election. In the days after the November 3, 2020 election, the account posted hundreds of times as it fully embraced numerous conspiracy theories about how the vote had been rigged. While citing dozens of different GOP lawmakers, Trump himself, and far-right influencers like Phillip Buchanan, the right-wing internet troll known as Catturd, the account most frequently shared claims of election conspiracies from an account called Election Wizard. That account was run by Travis Vernier, a former Oklahoma City police officer who had no experience in assessing election data. Despite this, Election Wizard became one of the most influential voices in the Stop the Steal movement, to the point that Vernier was even invited to Mar-a-Lago for Trump's 2022 announcement that he was running for president again. As well as sharing conspiracy theories, the account bearing Antoni's name repeatedly used violent rhetoric to declare how far it was willing to go to ensure Trump secured a second term in office. 'One side has over 1 trillion rounds of ammunition and the other side can't figure out which bathroom to use,' the account wrote in response to a post from QAnon promoter Tracy Beanz. 'I'll take those odds.' When Christina Bobb, a far-right television personality who became a primary promoter of election conspiracy theories, wrote on Twitter that the right should take 'no prisoners' in defending Trump, the account wrote: 'We give no quarter.' The posts made by the account bearing Antoni's name are sprinkled with hardline Catholic content, including multiple interactions with Michael Voris, the founder of the hardline Catholic group Church Militant. The account also frequently shared comments from ultra-conservative Catholic Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, the former nuncio to the United States who was excommunicated in 2024 after having repeatedly repudiated and criticized then-Pope Francis, as well as challenging the reforms of the Second Vatican Council. Antoni attended Landsale Catholic High School, where his mother was the STEM coordinator, and then St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in the Philadelphia suburbs. It's unclear if the person controlling the account deleted it or if it was included in a broad purge of Twitter accounts in response to January 6. As of Trump's nominating Antoni as the top BLS official, he tweets from an account that is almost exclusively dedicated to sharing economics data. While Antoni's social media presence is largely single-subject focused, there are still signs of similarity between his interests and those of the account previously bearing his name. On multiple occasions, for example, Antoni has made media and podcast appearances in a room with a large painting of a battleship behind him. During one 2023 podcast appearance, Antoni confirms to the host that the ship in question is from the fleet of Nazi Germany. 'The Bismarck, yep, in all his glory,' Antoni said. The Twitter account also referenced Nazi Germany. In 2019, in response to a Twitter user writing that 'we definitely need AR-15s' next to a video of a Boston Dynamics robot, the account using Antoni's name wrote: 'We need panzerschrecks.' A panzerschreck was a reusable anti-tank rocket launcher developed by Nazi Germany during World War 2. WIRED initially contacted the White House last week after it received a direct message on X purporting to be from Antoni's real account that seemingly confirmed @PhDofbombsaway was his. The White House noted that the DM actually came from a fake Antoni account, and declined to answer further questions.