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Debra Lea Explains How Mamdani's Policies Would Destroy New York City

Debra Lea Explains How Mamdani's Policies Would Destroy New York City

Fox News26-06-2025
Political commentator Debra Lea joins Fox Across America With Jimmy Failla to share her thoughts on some of the socialist policy proposals being promoted by New York City's presumptive Democratic nominee for mayor, Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani.
Jimmy Failla & Debra Lea Talk About The Latest Addition To Times Square
And listen to the podcast if you missed any of Thursday's show!
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Opinion: Karoline Leavitt Can't Cover Up the Truth. Trump's Cankles and Hand Makeup Say It All
Opinion: Karoline Leavitt Can't Cover Up the Truth. Trump's Cankles and Hand Makeup Say It All

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Opinion: Karoline Leavitt Can't Cover Up the Truth. Trump's Cankles and Hand Makeup Say It All

Forget the orange makeup on his hand. Forget the newly grey hair hovering above his scalp. Forget the slits for eyes. The real tell on Donald Trump is below the knee. His ankles, swollen and straining over his Oxfords, aren't just unsightly 'cankles'; they're flashing neon signs of a body under pressure. In medical terms, that puffiness often means venous or even cardiac insufficiency, the circulation slowing, the blood not moving as it should. These are not the hinges of stamina that can run a presidential marathon, but the hinges of a retiree glued to his La-Z-boy, feet up and watching Fox News all day. We've already seen this movie when it starred President Joe Biden. The stumbles, the shuffling, the vacant stares, all dismissed until his catastrophic debate meltdown, when the country suddenly realized the emperor had no recall. The press tiptoed around the obvious: he was too old. Then, boom. Reality hit on live TV. A year later, we're watching the sequel. Now it's Trump's turn under the unflattering fluorescent lights of mortality. He's 79, a number closer to octogenarian shuffleboard than to nuclear brinkmanship. Just this week, he twice announced he was 'going to Russia,' clearly confused about where his hastily scrambled Alaskan summit with President Putin was taking place. The confusion persisted. On Air Force One, he told Brett Baier he was a 'deal guy,' and if things didn't work with Putin he'd 'come back to the United States' and work on other things, as if peace in Europe could be abandoned llike a casino in Atlantic City. He's already forgotten his conversations with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and European leaders, who earlier this week were promised a ceasefire. And in the last fortnight, he's started mixing up names, referring to his head of homeland security Kristi Noem, as Cristie Kerr, the name of an LPGA golfer. During a White House event with Tim 'Apple' Cook, Trump thanked his commerce secretary Howard Lutnick 'wherever you may be'. 'I'm right behind you,' said a startled Lutnick. Last month at a ceremonial signing of a veteran's bill, Trump paused to acknowledge the bill's sponsor, Congressman Derrick Van Orden, asking 'Where's Derrick? Where's Derrick?' 'I'm here, sir.' Said Van Orden, standing right next to him. Embarassing. The decline is as obvious as the white eye circles protected from his spray tan. Trump's camp knows it too. Karoline Leavitt has dusted off Karine Jean-Pierre's old binder of excuses: the president is 'working very hard… 'every day is a test…' 'the bruises come from shaking hands…' Sound familiar? Age matters in the Oval Office. The job is a high-stress centrifuge, spinning out younger men in six months with gray hair and crow's feet. Obama grayed, Clinton ballooned, Reagan drifted. But 79? That's beyond the actuarial horizon. For Biden, the tell was the papery whisper, frozen smile, and multiple face-plants. For Trump, it's the gait, the new halo of fat around his neck, and the laborious climb up the stairs of Air Force One, gripping the railing, puffing like an aging club pro on the back nine. This isn't age-shaming; it's reality-shaming. To ignore what's obvious is political malpractice. The press flinched with Biden. We cannot do the same with Trump, dismissing senior moments as 'gaffes' or just 'Trump being Trump.' We shouldn't need another public collapse to admit the obvious: Donald Trump is old, and showing it. His cankles may be an unglamorous tell, but they're telling us a lot. Biden had less than a year to go on his contract when the slippage became undeniable. Trump has three years and change. That is a long time for someone to be stumbling through the most dangerous crises of our time. When Biden reached this weary, stumbling stage, Democrats led improbably by George Clooney rang the alarm. Will Kid Rock now step up to ask the president to step aside for the sake of the country? Will Vice President JD Vance or Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought reach for the 25th Amendment? Or perhaps Trump's handlers see this as an opportunity to seize power and pull the puppet's strings from behind the curtain. If that's the plan, it may not go quite as expected. Anyone who has ever tried to take the car keys away from a loved one exhibiting elderly mental impairment knows how difficult it is to get them to let go. Now imagine those keys are not for starting a car but for launching a nuclear strike. Good luck to them. And good luck to all of us.

Trump puts onus on Zelenskyy to end conflict with Russia ahead of meeting, citing Crimea and NATO
Trump puts onus on Zelenskyy to end conflict with Russia ahead of meeting, citing Crimea and NATO

CNBC

time36 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Trump puts onus on Zelenskyy to end conflict with Russia ahead of meeting, citing Crimea and NATO

U.S. President Donald Trump said Sunday the onus to end the war between Moscow and Kyiv is on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. In a post on Truth Social, Trump said that Zelenskyy could "end the war with Russia almost immediately, if he wants to, or he can continue to fight." "Remember how it started. No getting back Obama given Crimea (12 years ago, without a shot being fired!), and NO GOING INTO NATO BY UKRAINE," Trump added in the post, mirroring demands by the Kremlin for recognition of its annexation of Crimea and for Ukraine to be excluded from the NATO alliance. Russia seized Ukraine's Crimean peninsula in 2014 and backed separatists in eastern Ukraine, a move that was widely condemned by the international community. Moscow then launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Trump's comments come ahead of an Aug. 18 meeting in Washington with Zelenskyy and a number of European leaders. The gathering follows Trump's Aug. 15 talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska, which lasted three hours but did not yield a ceasefire agreement, though both sides described the talks as "productive." Trump reportedly told Zelenskyy after the meeting with Putin that Moscow had offered to freeze most of the front lines in Ukraine in exchange for Kyiv withdrawing from the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk. Zelenskyy had rejected the proposal ahead of the summit, saying this would deprive Ukraine of key defensive positions and allow Moscow to launch further offensives into Ukraine. Kyiv currently holds about one quarter of Donetsk, including its so-called "fortress belt" of cities. In a Fox News interview after the meeting with Putin, Trump urged Zelenskyy to strike a deal to end the war in Ukraine. "Look, Russia is a very big power, and [Ukraine is] not. They're great soldiers," he said. In 2024, then-U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said to the United Nations: "If Russia stops fighting, the war ends. If Ukraine stops fighting, Ukraine ends."

Hong Kong court begins hearing final arguments in Jimmy Lai's national security trial
Hong Kong court begins hearing final arguments in Jimmy Lai's national security trial

The Hill

timean hour ago

  • The Hill

Hong Kong court begins hearing final arguments in Jimmy Lai's national security trial

HONG KONG (AP) — A Hong Kong court began hearing final arguments Monday in the landmark national security trial of former pro-democracy newspaper founder Jimmy Lai, who could be sentenced to up to life in prison if he is convicted. Lai, 77, was arrested in 2020 under a national security law imposed by Beijing following anti-government protests in 2019. He is being tried on charges of colluding with foreign forces to endanger national security and conspiring with others to issue seditious publications. Lai founded Apple Daily, one of the local media outlets that was most critical against Hong Kong's government. His high-profile case — which has already stretched nearly 150 days, far beyond the original estimate of 80 days — is widely seen as a trial of press freedom and a test for judicial independence in the Asian financial hub. Prosecutors allege that Lai asked foreign countries, especially the United States, to take actions against Beijing 'under the guise of fighting for freedom and democracy.' On the first day of his testimony, he denied he had asked then-Vice President Mike Pence and then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to take action against Hong Kong and China during the 2019 protests. Later, when Lai's lawyer questioned him about an Apple Daily report saying he had asked the U.S. government to sanction Beijing and Hong Kong leaders, he said he must have discussed it with Pompeo, as he had no reason to doubt the accuracy of the report by the now-defunct newspaper he founded. But Lai said he would not have encouraged foreign sanctions after the national security law was enacted on June 30, 2020. The closing arguments have been delayed twice, first due to weather then to concerns over Lai's health. On Friday, his lawyer, Robert Pang, said Lai had experienced heart palpitations while in prison. The judges wanted him to secure a heart monitor and medication first. After Friday's hearing, the Hong Kong government alleged foreign media outlets had attempted to mislead the public about Lai's medical care. It said a medical examination of Lai found no abnormalities and that the medical care he received in custody was adequate. It is unclear when the verdict will be delivered. Lai's yearslong detention, especially in solidarity confinement, has drawn concerns from foreign governments and rights groups. U.S. President Donald Trump, before being elected to his second term in November, said he would talk to Chinese leader Xi Jinping to seek Lai's release: 'One hundred percent, I will get him out.' In a Fox News radio interview released last Thursday, Trump denied saying he would '100%' save Lai, but rather that he would bring the issue up. 'I've already brought it up, and I'm going to do everything I can to save him,' he said. China has accused Lai of stirring a rise in anti-China sentiments in Hong Kong and said it firmly opposes the interference of other countries in its internal affairs. Dozens of people waited in the rain Monday for a seat in the main courtroom to see Lai. Former Apple Daily reader Susan Li said she worried about Lai's health as he looked visibly thinner, and she would continue to pray for him. 'I wanted to let him know we are still here,' she said. When Hong Kong, a former British colony, returned to China in 1997, Beijing promised to retain the city's civil liberties for 50 years. But critics say that promise has become threadbare after the introduction of the security law, which Chinese and Hong Kong authorities insist was necessary for the city's stability.

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