White House outlines where DOGE savings could go after Trump floats returning 20% to Americans
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Congress will need to work through the reconciliation process before American taxpayers will see Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) dividend checks, Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff for policy, said Wednesday. Earlier in the day, President Donald Trump floated the idea of delivering the savings to taxpayers directly. Trump said 20% savings could be delivered to U.S. citizens in personal checks to taxpaying households, while another 20% would be used to pay down the national debt. DC FEDERAL WORKERS IN A ‘PANIC’ OVER NOVEL EXPERIENCE OF JOB INSECURITY WITH JOB CUTS DOGE so far claims to have saved some $55 billion via cuts to USAID, the Department of Education and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Some of DOGE’s cost-cutting efforts are under legal challenge, however. During Wednesday’s White House news briefing, Miller broke down how the money could be used. “We’re hearing about these DOGE dividend checks,” Fox News’ Peter Doocy asked. “That would be 20% back to taxpayers, 20% to pay down the debt, 60% is left. Who gets that?” “Well, the way that it works is when you achieve savings, you can either return it to the taxpayers, you can return it to our debtors, or it can be cycled into next year’s budget,” Miller replied. TRUMP SIGNS ORDER INSTRUCTING DOGE TO MASSIVELY CUT FEDERAL WORKFORCE “So in other words, you can just transfer it into the next fiscal window and then lower the overall spending level,” he added. Earlier this week, users on X pitched the idea of a “DOGE dividend” to Elon Musk, who leads DOGE, suggesting payouts of $5,000. The billionaire Tesla owner said he would “check with the president” about the plan. When asked when taxpayers could see the money, Miller said, “This is all going to be worked on through the reconciliation process with Congress that’s going under way right now.” “As you’ve seen, the Senate is moving a bill,” he added. “The House is moving a bill. The president has great confidence in both chambers to deliver on his priorities.” Trump has made a major commitment to the working class to fight for major tax relief, price relief and to cut spending, Miller said.
Former Kentucky AG who handled Breonna Taylor probe promptly announces Senate bid to replace Mitch McConnell
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Former Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron on Thursday announced that he is running to replace Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., in the upper chamber of Congress. Cameron, who was Kentucky’s first Black attorney general, announced his Senate campaign just minutes after McConnell said he would not seek re-election in 2026. “Kentucky, it’s time for a new generation of leadership in the U.S. Senate. Let’s do this,” Cameron wrote on X, sharing a screenshot of himself, his wife and their children seen on the Daniel Cameron U.S. Senate campaign website. Fox News Digital reached out to Cameron’s campaign for comment but did not immediately hear back. ‘GOOD RIDDANCE’: MAGA REACTS TO ‘RINO’ MITCH MCCONNELL SENATE EXIT A seven-term senator, McConnell announced on his 83rd birthday that he would not seek re-election and would retire at the end of his term. McConnell recently voted against several of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet picks: National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. McConnell voted in favor of Kash Patel, whom the Senate confirmed as Trump’s FBI director on Thursday. In a statement obtained by Fox News Digital, National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) Chair Tim Scott, R-S.C., said McConnell has “dedicated his life to public service and the state he loves” and “our country is grateful for his leadership and legacy of confirming conservative judges and justices, and safeguarding the Republican Senate Majority.” “Kentucky is a red state, so the NRSC is confident that our eventual nominee will be a principled, America First conservative who will join our Majority’s fight for our nation’s Golden Era,” Scott said. Cameron has long been groomed to become McConnell’s replacement. He unsuccessfully ran for governor in 2023 against two-term Democrat Andy Beshear. In his first year as attorney general, Cameron handled the investigation into Breonna Taylor’s shooting death during a March 2020 Louisville police raid at a time when George Floyd-era protests and riots swept the nation. His office ultimately declined to charge two officers who opened fire, but indicted a third on wanton endangerment over bullets that entered a neighbor’s apartment. That officer was acquitted in a state trial, but the Justice Department brought federal charges against all three. SEN MITCH MCCONNELL ANNOUNCES HE WILL NOT RUN FOR RE-ELECTION Cameron, the current CEO of the 1792 Exchange, a non-profit that aims to hold companies accountable for pushing a “far-left ideology,” might face GOP primary competition. Rep. Andy Barr, R-Ky., reiterated Thursday that he is “considering running for Senate because Kentucky deserves a Senator who will fight for President Trump and the America First Agenda.” “I’ve done that every day in the House and would do so in the Senate,” Barr said. “I’m encouraged by the outpouring of support and my family and I will be making a decision about our future soon.” Nate Morris, an entrepreneur serving as chairman and CEO of the Louisville-based Morris Industries, said last week he was still considering a run for McConnell’s seat, while slamming other potential candidates waiting for McConnell to back out first. “If you’re asking for a permission slip to run for office here in Kentucky from Mitch McConnell, then you shouldn’t be running in the first place,” Morris said. “The last thing Kentucky needs is another puppet for Mitch McConnell running for office.” As for Democrats, Beshear’s spokesman Eric Hyers said in a post on X that the governor would not be running to fill McConnell’s seat. Democratic state Rep. Pamela Stevenson of Louisville has long been fundraising to run for McConnell’s seat, according to the Courier Journal. Kentucky leans red in federal elections, such as Senate races, but has been more competitive during gubernatorial contests. Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.
Elon Musk makes surprise appearance at CPAC
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Elon Musk is set to deliver his debut speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on Thursday afternoon. CPAC organizers made a surprise announcement that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) chief and close President Donald Trump confidant would give a surprise address to attendees on Thursday afternoon. Other CPAC speakers this year include President Trump, Vice President JD Vance, immigration czar Tom Homan and many of the nation’s leading conservative politicians and influencers. At the conference’s opening ceremony, Vance addressed a packed house and touted many of the Trump administration’s accomplishments in its first full month. ‘WASTEFUL AND DANGEROUS’: DOGE’S TOP FIVE MOST SHOCKING REVELATIONS Since Trump returned to the White House, Musk has been the center of much of Democratic and media vitriol because of his role with DOGE and work gutting wasteful government programs, many of which have been rooted in diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) and other favorite liberal causes. DOGE claims that it has already cut $44 billion in previously wasted taxpayer dollars.
Texas House wants to give public schools $220 more per student
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The proposal, filed Thursday, comes well short of the increase school administrators and education advocates have been asking for.
Hawley calls for watchdog over Ukraine aid after Democrats blocked previous effort
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FIRST ON FOX: Amidst a war of words between President Donald Trump and Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Sen. Josh Hawley is pitching legislation that would install a special inspector general for Ukraine aid. Hawley, R-Mo., is reintroducing legislation he sponsored along with Vice President J.D. Vance, when Vance was in the Senate, for an independent watchdog to audit the more than $174 billion that Congress has appropriated for Ukraine aid. The Special Inspector General for Ukraine Assistance Act was voted down by the then-Democratic-controlled Senate when Hawley first introduced it in 2023. But with Republican control of both chambers of Congress and President Donald Trump’s increasing frustration over Ukraine aid, Hawley believes it now has a chance of becoming law. “American taxpayers shouldn’t have to wonder where their billions in aid to Ukraine went and what they’re funding there now. They deserve an accounting of every penny Congress shipped over there,” Hawley said in a statement. WALTZ SAYS UKRAINE SHOULD ‘TONE DOWN’ CRITICISM OF TRUMP The watchdog would be similar to those created for Afghanistan reconstruction, known as SIGAR, and one created to investigate CARES Act fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic, known as SIGPR, and another created after the 2008 financial crisis to audit the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP). Under Hawley’s bill, an inspector general’s office for Ukraine would conduct oversight of aid programs run by the Department of Defense, State Department, and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). The legislation would siphon dollars from the Ukraine Economic Assistance Fund for the office, and the inspector general would be required to submit quarterly reports to Congress on the office’s findings. GOP SENATORS BACK TRUMP’S DEMAND FOR UKRAINE ELECTIONS, BUT WON’T CALL ZELENSKYY ‘DICTATOR’ And as Congress hashes out a budget blueprint, Hawley has issued a warning to Senate leaders not to try to “slip in” Ukraine aid. “We shouldn’t be giving a dime more to Ukraine. We should be auditing the billions we’ve already given them,” he said. Hawley’s action comes as tensions between Trump and Zelenskyy reached a fever pitch this week after Trump called the Ukrainian leader a “dictator” who “never should have started” the war. Zelenskyy in turn said Trump is operating in a “disinformation space.” This week, Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and national security adviser Mike Waltz sat down with their Russian counterparts and agreed to increase their diplomatic presences in each other’s nations. Hawley, while veering away from calling Zelenskyy a “dictator,” backed up Trump’s assertion that Ukraine needed to hold elections, even in a time of war. TRUMP CALLS UKRAINE’S ZELENSKYY A ‘DICTATOR WITHOUT ELECTIONS’ AS RIFT WIDENS “We held elections during World War II,” Hawley said. “If they’re a democracy, they should hold elections. I don’t think that’s difficult.” “[Zelenskyy] is the elected leader of the country,” said Hawley. “But, you know, at a certain point you’ve got to hold elections.” Trump has been pushing Zelenskyy to pay up for past U.S. support. Last week, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent traveled to Ukraine to hand the Ukrainian president a draft deal entitling the U.S. to hundreds of billions worth of its minerals. National security adviser Mike Waltz said on Thursday that Ukraine needs to “tone it down” and sign the mineral deal. “We presented the Ukrainians really an incredible and historic opportunity to have the United States of America co-invest with Ukraine, invest in its economy, invest in its natural resources and really become a partner in Ukraine’s future in a way that’s sustainable, but also would be – I think – the best security guarantee they could ever hope for, much more than another pallet of ammunition,” he said.
DEI-charged claims fly over contract talks for military school’s leader as lawmaker demands ethics probe
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Virginia Democratic lawmakers are raising racially tinged concerns that the Virginia Military Institute’s board might decide against offering a comprehensive contract extension to the historic school’s first Black superintendent. According to Rep. Ben Cline, R-Va., a board member at Virginia Military Institute revealed that at least one member of the Virginia legislature had expressed concerns about the potential non-extension of Maj. Gen. Cedric Wins’ contract, and brought race into the situation. Cline, whose district runs nearly 200 miles from Roanoke to Winchester and includes VMI, wrote a letter Tuesday to the clerks of the Virginia House of Delegates and Virginia Senate asking for an ethics probe into Sen. Jennifer Carroll-Foy. Carroll-Foy, D-Prince William, reportedly warned a VMI Board of Visitors member of state funding repercussions unless Wins’ contract is renewed properly. CLIMATE PROTESTERS INTERRUPT YOUNGKIN’S 9/11 SPEECH “I am just trying to help VMI,” Carroll-Foy – also a VMI graduate – told the board member. “Cedric is African American. The leadership of the General Assembly is African American. Your board appointments and budget amendments are in peril. You can fix this by giving Cedric a four-year contract extension,” she said. Virginia House Speaker Don Scott, D-Portsmouth, and Senate Leader L. Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth, are both Black. The exchange troubled Cline, who said in his letter that “these actions, specifically the direct threats made by [Carroll-Foy] are unbecoming, inappropriate, and ethically questionable.” “These race-related comments – totally unbecoming of a member of the General Assembly and completely inconsistent with the values of our nation – make plain the leadership in the General Assembly is attempting to exert undue influence on the decisions of the board in exchange for funding priorities of VMI,” Cline wrote in-part in the letter obtained by Fox News Digital. A source familiar with the situation told Fox News Digital there are other lawmakers besides Carroll-Foy who have connected race or DEI considerations to the contract debate. A statement from Cline’s office said that the congressman – and former member of the Richmond legislature himself – believes that attempts to “strong-arm members of the VMI board by withholding funding . . . reveal a clear and troubling effort to exert undue influence over VMI’s governance.” DOJ ONCE OK’D KAINE-ERA LAW AT CENTER OF YOUNGKIN VOTE CULLING ORDER FEDS NOW SUING TO BLOCK “The idea that members of the General Assembly would use their positions of power to intimidate VMI Board members by conditioning funding on the extension of the superintendent’s contract is not just inappropriate, it is an outright abuse of power,” Cline said in a statement. “These comments, wholly unbecoming of a member of the General Assembly and completely inconsistent with the values of our nation, make plain the leadership of the General Assembly is attempting to exert undue influence on the decisions of the Board in exchange for funding priorities of VMI,” he added. Scott did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported that he and former Virginia Gov. Douglas Wilder – the first Black governor in U.S. history – would like to see Wins’ contract extended. However, the speaker told the paper that the debate is “not about Gen. Wins’ contract – it’s about whether the school is moving in the right direction.” Current Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who has seen Democrats stymie several of his appointments to collegiate boards of visitors – including counter-antisemitism crusader Kenneth Marcus at George Mason University – said through a spokesman that the members he had previously named to the VMI board have his full support. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP “The governor appointed experienced and strong members to the board of visitors, all deeply committed to VMI and its mission,” spokesman Christian Martinez said. “He has full confidence the board will act in the best interest of [VMI] and the Commonwealth.” Two of Youngkin’s 12 VMI appointees were recently removed by state Senate Democrats, the Times-Dispatch reported. Fox News Digital also reached out to Carroll-Foy and a representative for VMI. VMI is the oldest state military institution in the country, founded in 1839. Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson notably taught at VMI in the lead-up to the Civil War. More recent famous VMI alumni include the late actor Fred Willard, World War II figures George Marshall and Gen. George Patton, award-winning comic Mel Brooks and Col. Douglas Macgregor – a veteran of the historic Battle of 73 Easting and an occasional Fox News guest.
SCOOP: Republican Daniel Cameron blasted by likely GOP opponent as McConnell successor fight begins
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FIRST ON FOX: Just after announcing his bid for former Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell’s seat, Daniel Cameron is being slammed for his electability, or lack thereof, by a potential GOP opponent. “When President Trump and Andy Barr teamed up in his 2018 election, they won Kentucky’s toughest Congressional race against Amy McGrath and the Trump resistance,” Tyler Staker, spokesperson for Rep. Andy Barr, R-Ky., told Fox News Digital in an exclusive statement. “When President Trump endorsed Daniel Cameron for Governor, Daniel embarrassed the President and our party by losing in a state that President Trump won by over 30 points—including losing Andy Barr’s district by 19 points. We need proven winners, not folks who can’t win even with the support of the greatest President we’ve ever seen,” he continued. SUSAN COLLINS VOWS TO OPPOSE TRUMP FBI DIRECTOR NOMINEE KASH PATEL AHEAD OF CRITICAL VOTE Brandon Moody, Cameron’s Senate campaign strategist, told Fox News Digital in a statement, “Daniel Cameron is up 30 points on Andy Barr in the latest statewide public polling. So Andy is a little confused about electability. Probably too much wine last night from his hundredth lobbyist dinner of the month.” McConnell announced on Thursday that he would not be seeking re-election when his seat is up in 2026, opening up an opportunity for new candidates in red Kentucky. “I’ve never liked calling too much attention to today’s date, February 20th. But I figured my birthday would be as good a day as any to share with our colleagues a decision I made last year about how I’ll approach the 119th Congress,” the longtime Republican leader said on the Senate floor. “My current term in the Senate will be my last,” he revealed. KASH PATEL’S CONFIRMATION AS TRUMP FBI PICK ‘WILL HAUNT YOU,’ SENATE DEMS WARN GOP AHEAD OF VOTE Immediately following the news, Cameron announced his campaign for the seat. He notably served as Kentucky’s attorney general before unsuccessfully running for governor, losing to Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear. National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) Chairman Tim Scott, R-S.C., issued the following statement on the retirement news: “Senator Mitch McConnell dedicated his life to public service and the state he loves. Our country is grateful for his leadership and legacy of confirming conservative judges and justices, and safeguarding the Republican Senate Majority. Kentucky is a red state, so the NRSC is confident that our eventual nominee will be a principled, America First conservative who will join our Majority’s fight for our nation’s Golden Era.” FETTERMAN LOSES TWO TOP STAFFERS AS HE MAKES WAVES BY BUCKING DEMOCRATIC PARTY Barr did not say whether he would jump into the Senate race on Thursday, but he did write on X, “As I’ve said before this announcement, I am considering running for Senate because Kentucky deserves a Senator who will fight for President Trump and the America First Agenda. I’ve done that every day in the House and would do so in the Senate. I’m encouraged by the outpouring of support and my family and I will be making a decision about our future soon.” Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., chairman of the House Oversight Committee, won’t be running for McConnell’s seat. Spokesperson Austin Hacker said in a statement, “Congressman Comer will not be running for Senate in 2026 but is strongly considering a run for Governor in 2027.” SCOOP: TOP GOP SEN. COTTON TO MEET WITH EMBATTLED TRUMP DEFENSE NOMINEE AS DOUBTS SWIRL Kentucky is strongly favored for Republicans in the 2026 Senate race, but Democrats are expected to put significant money and effort into making it competitive. Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) spokesman David Bergstein said in a statement, “Republicans were already facing a difficult Senate map and now another open seat has created an additional defensive headache for them.”
FBI Director Kash Patel vows to restore trust in bureau, hunt down bad actors ‘in every corner of this planet’
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EXCLUSIVE: FBI Director Kash Patel vowed to rebuild trust by creating a “transparent, accountable” agency that is “committed to justice,” while warning those who “seek to harm Americans” that the bureau will “hunt you down in every corner of this planet.” Patel was confirmed by the U.S. Senate Thursday as the ninth ever FBI director, succeeding Christopher Wray. “I am honored to be confirmed as the ninth Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,” Patel told Fox News Digital, thanking President Donald Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi for their “unwavering confidence and support.” HERE’S WHAT KASH PATEL’S FORMER COLLEAGUES ARE SAYING ABOUT HIM “The FBI has a storied legacy — from the ‘G-Men’ to safeguarding our nation in the wake of 9/11,” Patel said. “The American people deserve an FBI that is transparent, accountable, and committed to justice.” “The politicization of our justice system has eroded public trust — but that ends today,” he added. Patel told Fox News Digital that his “mission” as FBI director “is clear.” “Let good cops be cops,” he said. “And rebuild trust in the FBI.” “Working alongside the dedicated men and women of the bureau and our partners, we will rebuild an FBI the American people can be proud of,” Patel said. And Patel issued a stark warning. “To those who seek to harm Americans — consider this your warning,” Patel said. “We will hunt you down in every corner of this planet.” He added: “Mission First. America Always. Let’s get to work.” Patel has an extensive background in national security and intelligence, with experience ranging from personally carrying out dangerous missions in the Middle East in an effort to bring home U.S. hostages to implementing counterterrorism strategies against America’s most-wanted terrorists. FBI IGNORED ‘CLEAR WARNING SIGN’ OF CLINTON-LED EFFORT TO ‘MANIPULATE’ BUREAU FOR ‘POLITICAL PURPOSES’ Current and former U.S. national security officials and lawmakers told Fox News Digital that he, “objectively,” is “one of the most experienced people ever to be nominated” to lead the bureau. During the first Trump administration, Patel served as a deputy assistant to Trump and as senior director for counterterrorism. In that role, Patel was involved in presidential missions aimed at decimating al Qaeda senior leadership and ISIS command and control. Patel was involved in the planning of the mission to take out Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, among others. Patel also was involved in efforts to bring some of the most-wanted terrorists to the U.S. for prosecution, and worked on Trump administration efforts to return dozens of U.S. hostages back home. Beyond his counterterrorism work, Patel was heavily involved in U.S. strategy to counter Chinese, Russian, Iranian and North Korean efforts against U.S. interests. He also worked on the implementation of multimillion dollar sanctions against foreign adversaries. Prior to working as a deputy to Trump and in the National Security Council, Patel worked in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) as the principal deputy to the acting DNI Ric Grenell and helped former Director John Ratcliffe transition into the role. Trump nominated Ratcliffe in January to serve as the director of the CIA. At ODNI, Patel also worked to focus intelligence collection against counter-narcotic and transnational threats. Prior to joining the first Trump administration, Patel served as the national security advisor and senior counsel for counterterrorism to the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Patel was also the chief investigator for the committee’s probe into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. Throughout his investigation, he led the effort to uncover FISA abuse and exposed the FBI and the DOJ’s unlawful actions before federal court to illegally surveil Americans, including members of the 2016 Trump campaign. Patel uncovered the government surveillance abuse that led to the appointment of two special counsels: one who determined there was no such collusion, Special Counsel Robert Mueller, and another who determined the entire premise of the FBI’s original investigation was bogus, Special Counsel John Durham. In July 2016, during the 2016 election cycle, the FBI launched an investigation into whether the Trump campaign was colluding with Russia to influence the outcome of the election. That investigation, inside the bureau, was known as “Crossfire Hurricane.” By January 2017, then-FBI Director James Comey had notified Trump of a dossier, known as the Steele dossier, that contained salacious and unverified allegations about Trump’s purported coordination with the Russian government, a key document prompting the opening of the probe. DECLASSIFIED TRUMP-RUSSIA PROBE DOCUMENTS: WHAT TO KNOW The dossier was authored by Christopher Steele, a former British intelligence officer, and commissioned by Fusion GPS. Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign had hired Fusion GPS during the 2016 election cycle. It eventually was determined that the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee funded the dossier through the law firm Perkins Coie. Trump fired Comey in May 2017. Days later, Robert Mueller was appointed as special counsel to take over the “Crossfire Hurricane” probe and investigate whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia to influence the 2016 election cycle. While Mueller investigated, the HPSCI opened its own investigation into alleged Trump-Russia collusion. Patel, as chief investigator for Nunes, by February 2018 had discovered widespread government surveillance abuse, including improper surveillance of former Trump campaign aide Carter Page. “While most members of Congress were ready to ignore the unprecedented civil rights abuses against the Trump campaign and myself, Kash Patel’s training as a top public defender made him the perfect advocate for exposing one of the greatest election interference scandals of all time,” Page told Fox News Digital. Patel was an integral part of the creation of a memo released by then-Chair Nunes in February 2018, which detailed the DOJ’s and FBI’s surveillance of Page under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. DURHAM FINDS DOJ, FBI ‘FAILED TO UPHOLD’ MISSION OF ‘STRICT FIDELITY TO THE LAW’ IN TRUMP-RUSSIA PROBE Nunes and Patel revealed that the infamous anti-Trump dossier funded by Democrats “formed an essential part” of the application to spy on Page. The memo referred to closed-door
In Odessa, multiple efforts are underway to help immigrants stay and work
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A naturalized citizen, along with other business leaders, are working to create new resources for undocumented people living in the Permian Basin.
NY Gov Hochul to ramp up oversight of NYC Mayor Adams amid pressure to remove him
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New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is planning to announce new state and city bills that would add oversight to the New York City mayor’s office, sources familiar with the governor’s decision told Fox News on Thursday, a move that comes amid Mayor Eric Adams’ legal woes and his recent cooperation with President Donald Trump. Instead of removing Adams from office, as the governor had reportedly considered, the sources said that Hochul would set up guardrails, which could include the addition of an independent monitor at City Hall. Hochul reportedly met with multiple New York leaders this week while considering removing Adams from his job. Senior prosecutors in New York and Washington have reportedly resigned after refusing to follow a Department of Justice (DOJ) order to drop charges against Adams. FEDERAL JUDGE WAITS TO DECIDE ABOUT DISMISSING CORRUPTION CHARGES AGAINST NYC MAYOR ERIC ADAMS The former police officer-turned-politician was indicted on charges linked to wire fraud, bribery, and soliciting campaign funds from foreign sources. The indictment was unsealed in September 2024, and Adams subsequently pleaded not guilty. Adams’ fellow Democrats have accused him of trying to cozy up with the Trump administration in order to get out of his criminal charges. ERIC ADAMS GETS SURPRISE GOP ALLY IN CONGRESS AS RUMORS SWIRL GOV. HOCHUL COULD OUST HIM Adams has denied accusations of any quid pro quo deals. “I want to be crystal clear with New Yorkers: I never offered — nor did anyone offer on my behalf — any trade of my authority as your mayor for an end to my case. Never,” Adams said in a statement Friday. But Hochul remains concerned about what has been happening at City Hall, according to the sources, and was waiting for U.S. District Judge Dale Ho to rule on the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss the case against Adams before making any announcements. Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind and Diana Stancy contributed to this report.