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Where does Trump stand with Americans hours before his primetime speech to Congress?

Where does Trump stand with Americans hours before his primetime speech to Congress?

President Donald Trump vows to “TELL IT LIKE IT IS” during his primetime address Tuesday to a joint session of Congress. “TOMORROW NIGHT WILL BE BIG,” the president touted in a social media post on the eve of his first major speech to Congress during his second presidential administration. Trump is expected to use the address — which Fox News was first to report will be themed, “The Renewal of the American Dream” — to showcase his avalanche of activity during his first six weeks in the White House. “Best Opening Month of any President in history,” Trump wrote in a social media post last week, as he touted his accomplishments — some of them controversial — since his Jan. 20 inauguration. TUNE IN: LIVE COVERAGE OF TRUMP’S ADDRESS TO CONGRESS TONIGHT ON FOX NEWS However, the latest polls indicate Americans are divided on the job he has done so far. Trump stands at 45% approval and 49% disapproval in one of those polls, according to a Marist College poll for PBS News and NPR. Additionally, a CNN survey, also conducted last week, put the president’s approval rating at 48%, with 52% disapproving.  But Trump’s approval ratings were above water in other new polls, including one for CBS News that was also in the field in recent days and released over the weekend. HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS POLLING With the president being a polarizing and larger-than-life politician, it is no surprise that the latest polls indicate a massive partisan divide over Trump’s performance. The surveys spotlight that the vast majority of Democrats give the president a big thumbs down, while Republicans overwhelmingly approve of the job he is doing in office. While Americans are split on Trump’s performance, the approval ratings for his second term are an improvement from his first tour of duty, when he started 2017 in negative territory and remained underwater throughout his four-year tenure in the White House. One reason — Trump nowadays enjoys rock solid Republican support. “He never had support among Democrats in the first administration, but he also had some trouble with Republicans,” Daron Shaw, a politics professor and chair at the University of Texas, noted. Shaw, who serves as a member of the Fox News Decision Team and the Republican partner on the Fox News Poll, emphasized “that’s one acute difference between 2017 and 2025. The party’s completely solidified behind him.” Trump has been moving at warp speed during his opening six weeks back in the White House with a flurry of executive orders and actions. His moves not only fulfilled some of his major campaign trail promises, but also allowed the returning president to flex his executive muscles, quickly put his stamp on the federal government, make major cuts to the federal workforce and also settle some long-standing grievances. FIRST ON FOX: WHAT TRUMP WILL SAY IN HIS PRIMETIME SPEECH Trump as of Tuesday had signed 82 executive orders since his inauguration, according to a count from Fox News, which far surpasses the rate of any recent presidential predecessors during their first weeks in office. Those moves include a high-profile crackdown on immigration, slapping steep tariffs on major trading partners, including Canada and Mexico, and freezing foreign aid to Ukraine. TOP WILDEST MOMENTS FROM PRESIDENTIAL SPEECHES TO CONGRESS “It’s been a flooding-of-the-zone here every day, often multiple times a day,” Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion, told Fox News Digital. “We’re just seeing a lot of things happening with little time for the public to digest. The net effect of it all is there’s a sense, on the part of the public, that some things are moving just a little too fast.” While an improvement over his first term, Trump’s approval ratings are lower six weeks into his presidency than any of his recent predecessors in the White House. Shaw noted that neither Trump nor former President Joe Biden “started out with overwhelming approval. This is not like the honeymoon period that we historically expect presidents to enjoy….Historically, the other side gives you a little bit of leeway when you first come in. That just doesn’t happen anymore.” Biden’s approval rating hovered in the low- to mid-50s during the first six months of his single term as president, with his disapproval in the upper 30s to the low- to mid-40s.  However, Biden’s numbers sank into negative territory in the late summer and autumn of 2021, in the wake of his much-criticized handling of the turbulent U.S. exit from Afghanistan, and amid soaring inflation and a surge of migrants crossing into the U.S. along the nation’s southern border with Mexico. Biden’s approval ratings stayed underwater throughout the rest of his presidency. “He just got crippled and never recovered,” Shaw said of Biden. An average of all the most recent national polls indicates that Trump’s approval ratings are just above water. However, Trump has seen his numbers edge down slightly since returning to the White House in late January, when an average of his polls indicated the president’s approval rating in the low 50s and his disapproval in the mid 40s. “The honeymoon is over, and he’s actually governing, and that typically does bring numbers down,” veteran political scientist Wayne Lesperance, the president of New Hampshire-based New England College, told Fox News Digital. “I expect the numbers to continue to slip as the changes in Washington really do begin to impact people’s everyday lives.” Shaw noted that Trump’s “rating on the economy is about minus four, which is 25 points better than Biden. He’s above water on immigration. His best issue right now is crime. He’s plus ten on crime.” However, Shaw emphasized that inflation, the issue that helped propel Trump back into the White House, remains critical to the president’s political fortunes. “If prices remain high, he’s going to have trouble,” Shaw warned.

Rep Darrell Issa nominates Trump for Nobel Peace Prize

Rep Darrell Issa nominates Trump for Nobel Peace Prize

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., announced Monday in a post on X that he was nominating President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. “Today I will nominate @realDonaldTrump for the Nobel Peace Prize. No one deserves it more,” Issa declared in the tweet. Fox News Digital reached out to Issa’s office on Tuesday to request a comment from the congressman regarding why he decided to nominate the president for the award. TRUMP SAYS ZELENSKYY CAN ‘COME BACK WHEN HE IS READY FOR PEACE’ AFTER FIERY WHITE HOUSE EXCHANGE “Not since Ronald Reagan has an American president better represented the national resolve of peace through strength or the fundamental case for a world without war,” Issa said in a statement to Fox News Digital. “Remarkably, it was the 2024 election of Donald Trump – more than 10 weeks before his swearing in – that tangibly kickstarted the cause of peace in numerous regions of the world, and we are already seeing the benefits. I hope the Committee takes note of these extraordinary times and recognizes that President Trump ideally represents what the Nobel Peace Prize should stand for,” the lawmaker added. President Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009, less than a year into his first term in office. REP TENNEY NOMINATES TRUMP FOR NOBEL PEACE PRIZE FOR ‘HISTORIC’ ABRAHAM ACCORDS Rep. Claudia Tenney, R-N.Y., nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize last year. “Donald Trump was instrumental in facilitating the first new peace agreements in the Middle East in almost 30 years,” the congresswoman said, according to a January 2024 press release. Later in 2024, Tenney nominated Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for the prize. NEW BILL THREATENS TO CRIPPLE ‘JUDICIAL TYRANNY’ FROM DERAILING TRUMP’S AGENDA AT EVERY TURN CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP She asserted that their “valiant work to combat terrorism and stand up to Islamist regimes has directly led to greater regional and global stability,” according to a December 2024 press release.

Zelenskyy says Ukraine ‘ready’ for peace negotiations, calls Trump meeting ‘regrettable’

Zelenskyy says Ukraine ‘ready’ for peace negotiations, calls Trump meeting ‘regrettable’

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called his meeting at the White House last week “regrettable” on Tuesday and said he is ready to pursue peace under President Donald Trump’s leadership. Zelenskyy made the concession in a lengthy statement posted to social media on Tuesday, saying Ukraine “is ready to come to the negotiating table.” He added that last week’s meeting “did not go the way it was supposed to be,” and he said “it is time to make things right.” “My team and I stand ready to work under President Trump’s strong leadership to get a peace that lasts,” Zelenskyy wrote. “We are ready to work fast to end the war, and the first stages could be the release of prisoners and truce in the sky — ban on missiles, long-ranged drones, bombs on energy and other civilian infrastructure — and truce in the sea immediately, if Russia will do the same. Then we want to move very fast through all next stages and to work with the US to agree a strong final deal,” he added. ZELENSKYY SPEAKS OUT AFTER PUBLIC SPAT WITH TRUMP, VANCE, SAYS DUSTUP ‘BAD FOR BOTH SIDES’ “We do really value how much America has done to help Ukraine maintain its sovereignty and independence. And we remember the moment when things changed when President Trump provided Ukraine with Javelins. We are grateful for this,” the statement continued. ZELENSKYY MEETS WITH BRITISH PRIME MINISTER KEIR STARMER IN LONDON FOLLOWING TRUMP OVAL OFFICE CLASH “Our meeting in Washington, at the White House on Friday, did not go the way it was supposed to be. It is regrettable that it happened this way. It is time to make things right. We would like future cooperation and communication to be constructive. Regarding the agreement on minerals and security, Ukraine is ready to sign it at any time and in any convenient format. We see this agreement as a step toward greater security and solid security guarantees, and I truly hope it will work effectively,” Zelenskyy concluded. Zelenskyy’s statement comes after White House National Security Adviser Mike Waltz called Zelenskyy’s clash with Trump “ridiculous” in a Monday appearance on Fox News. Waltz said Trump’s White House needed to hear that Zelenskyy “has regret for what happened” and that he is now “ready to engage in peace talks.” JD VANCE STEPS INTO THE SPOTLIGHT DEFENDING TRUMP’S FOREIGN POLICY IN OVAL OFFICE DUSTUP WITH ZELENSKYY The drawdown of hostilities referenced in Zelenskyy’s statement mirrors that proposed by European leaders in a meeting with Zelenskyy on Sunday. U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron suggested a freeze on strikes from the air, sea and on energy infrastructure for 30 days in Ukraine. Macron told French media the window could be used to negotiate a wider peace deal. Trump’s White House has yet to weigh in on the proposal. Zelenskyy’s statement came less than a day after Trump paused all aid to Ukraine on Monday night. A senior Trump administration official also told Fox News that military aid will remain on hold until Ukrainian leaders show a commitment to good faith peace negotiations. “This is not permanent termination of aid, it’s a pause,” the official emphasized. “The orders are going out right now.”

Vance visits Capitol Hill to urge senators to confirm Elbridge Colby for Pentagon No. 3 post

Vance visits Capitol Hill to urge senators to confirm Elbridge Colby for Pentagon No. 3 post

Vice President JD Vance visited Capitol Hill to offer a message of support for his “friend,” Elbridge “Bridge” Colby, President Donald Trump’s contentious nominee for the Pentagon’s No. 3 spot, undersecretary of defense for policy.  “In so many ways, Bridge predicted what we would be talking about four years down the road, five years down the road, ten years down the road. He saw around corners that very few other people were seeing around,” Vance said in opening remarks Tuesday at Colby’s confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee. “If you look at his long career in defense policy, he has said things that, you know, frankly, alienated Democrats and Republicans. He’s also said things that I think both Democrats and Republicans would agree with,” Vance continued.  The vice president praised Colby as a “good man” and an “honest man.”  “You need people who are going to tell you the truth. We’re going to look you in the eye who are going to disagree,” Vance said.  DISPUTED DOD NOMINEE IS ‘BEST PERSON’ TO IMPLEMENT TRUMP AND HEGSETH AGENDA, KEY CONSERVATIVE GROUP SAYS The vice president’s presence demonstrates how seriously the White House is looking to shore up support for Colby, whose restraint-minded views have given pause to some more hawkish senators. It is the second confirmation hearing Vance has attended after Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who the vice president also has a close relationship with.   Colby said in his own opening remarks, “There is a real risk of major war, and we cannot afford to lose one. I recognize these realities in my bones. It is my great hope that we can get through the coming years peacefully, with strength in ways that put us and our alliances on a stronger and more sustainable footing.” “I’m willing and ready to engage with those who disagree with me and adapt my views based on persuasive arguments and the fact is that I value our alliances deeply, even as I think they must be adapted, and that I love our great country, and will put its interests first and foremost.” Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker questioned Colby on his previously stated position, “America has a strong interest in defending Taiwan, but Americans can survive without it.”  “Your views on Taiwan’s importance to the United States seems to have soft and soft considerably,” Wicker told Colby.  Colby disputed that point, arguing he had been shooting a warning flare that the U.S.’ “military balance has declined” with regard to China. “What I have been trying to shoot a signal flare over is that it is vital for us to focus and enable our own forces for an effective and reasonable defense of Taiwan and for the Taiwanese, as well as the Japanese to do more,” said Colby.   “So my position in terms of the value of Taiwan is consistent. But what I’m very fearful of, Senator, and I think this is agreed across administrations of both parties, is that, you know, the military balance has declined. So I’m trying to avoid a situation of which, because we are not adequately prepared.” MAGA LOYALISTS TAKE AIM AT GOP SENATOR AS KEY TRUMP DEFENSE POST SPARKS CONTROVERSY: ‘WHY THE OPPOSITION?’ Sen. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the committee, pressed Colby on his views on Russia and Ukraine.  “In November 2023, you said, ‘the invasion of Ukraine is an evil act by the Russians, and I morally support the Ukrainian defense.’ Do you still agree with that statement, senator?” asked Reed, D-RI. “I think I stand by my record, but at this point, I think, there’s a very delicate diplomatic process going on where the president is rightfully trying to resuscitate the peace process. And I don’t think it’d be appropriate for me to weigh in,” said Colby.  Sen. Kristen Gillibrand, D-NY, pressed Colby on whether Russia was an “adversary” or an “ally” to the U.S.  “Russia presents a significant military threat to Europe, and there are significant military threats to the homeland as well,” said Colby. “We can … diminish, you know, the potential for direct confrontation with Russia in the same way with China.” Colby’s confirmation process has rankled Iran hawks, and at least Sen. Tom Cotton, R-AK, has privately expressed skepticism. Wicker previously told Roll Call that Colby’s nomination posts “a concern to a number of senators.”  Colby, who worked at the Pentagon during Trump’s first term and was a lead author on the 2018 U.S. National Security Strategy, has long asserted the U.S. should limit its resources in the Middle East and refocus on China as the bigger threat.

‘She’s really this dumb’: House Dem ripped after calling Trump ‘enemy of the United States’

‘She’s really this dumb’: House Dem ripped after calling Trump ‘enemy of the United States’

Democratic Rep. Jasmine Crockett was ripped by conservatives on social media this week after claiming President Donald Trump is “occupying the White House” and is an “enemy to the United States.” “Unfortunately, we have someone that is occupying the White House, and as far as I’m concerned, he is an enemy to the United States,” Crockett said on MSNBC on Sunday. “I don’t know what it’s going to take to get people to wake up.” The Texas congresswoman also suggested that Trump is a “dictator” in her cable news appearance. Conservatives on social media quickly pushed back against Crockett. ELON MUSK TAKES AIM AT NATIONAL DEBT, WARNS OF ‘DE FACTO BANKRUPTCY’ WITHOUT DOGE: ‘$2 TRILLION IN DEFICITS’ “Almost sounds like this ‘defender of democracy’ would support an insurrection,” Fox News host Laura Ingraham posted on X.  “When are we going to hold members of Congress accountable for their words and actions?” retired professor Carol Swain posted on X.  “Dangerous election denier stuff here,” former Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., posted on X. “By all means, continue this leaderless, tired charade and keep losing elections,” Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., posted on X.  “Yeah, she’s running in 2028,” Red State writer Bonchie posted on X.  “Jasmine Crockett labeled Trump as an enemy of America while simultaneously saying she doesn’t understand anything that’s going on,” conservative influencer account Gunther Eagleman posted on X. “She’s really this dumb.” NEW DOGE BILL WOULD TARGET MORE THAN $200B IN ANNUAL IMPROPER PAYMENTS FROM SAFETY NETS, LAWMAKER SAYS “The unquestioned leader of the Democratic Party,” CNN commentator Scott Jennings posted on X. “Keep going!” Fox News Digital reached out to Crockett’s office for comment but did not immediately hear back. Crockett has become one of the most prominent faces of the Democratic Party, opposing Trump’s agenda and the DOGE efforts of Tesla CEO Elon Musk.  Crockett recently sparked a frenzy on social media when she told a reporter outside the U.S. Capitol that if she could tell Musk one thing it would be, “F— off.”

GOP rebels fire warning shot in shutdown showdown: No DOGE, no deal

GOP rebels fire warning shot in shutdown showdown: No DOGE, no deal

FIRST ON FOX: A group of conservative lawmakers in the House and Senate is warning Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., against agreeing to restrict the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in a spending bill as the government shutdown deadline of March 14 inches closer.  The sometimes-resistant batch of Republicans is also committing to backing a clean stopgap bill for the rest of the fiscal year to avoid a shutdown, which they’ve opposed in the past.  “[W]e are deeply concerned about recent reports of Democrats’ demands for a government funding agreement that would perpetuate the unsustainable status quo of wasteful spending,” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., and House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris, R-Md., joined by several others, wrote to the congressional leaders.  The group of signers included several fiscal hawks in the House and Senate, many of whom have opposed stopgap spending bills on principle, preferring full-year appropriations bills.  “Any attempt to use government funding legislation to dilute the President’s constitutional authority to save taxpayer dollars must be rejected outright,” the lawmakers wrote. WHO IS ELISSA SLOTKIN, AND WHY DID DEMS CHOOSE HER FOR THE PARTY’S REBUTTAL TO TRUMP SPEECH? In this circumstance, the group of Congressional conservatives said they’re willing to back a “clean” continuing resolution, or short-term spending bill, that lasts the rest of the year, for the sake of avoiding a government shutdown.  But they also made it very clear to Johnson and Thune: Don’t let Democrats restrict DOGE in the spending bill.  The correspondence was co-signed by 19 other Republicans: Sens. Mike Lee, R-Utah, Ron Johnson, R-Wis., Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., Ted Budd, R-N.C., and Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, and Reps. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., Ralph Norman, R-S.C., Barry Moore, R-Ala., Clay Higgins, R-La., Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., Brandon Gill, R-Texas, Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., Sheri Biggs, R-S.C., and Mark Harris, R-N.C. Scott is the new chairman of the Republican Senate Steering Committee, a group of conservatives in the upper chamber that works to influence policy and priorities in their conference.  FLASHBACK: DEM SENATOR EMBROILED IN CONFLICT OF INTEREST ROW TARGETED SCOTUS IN ETHICS CRUSADE READ THE LETTER – APP USERS, CLICK HERE: According to the sometimes rebellious group of Republicans, they “stand ready” to work with both House and Senate leadership to keep the government open. But, they said, “we will not support a government funding package that would be weaponized against President Trump at the very moment he is seeking to make good on the promises he made to the American people.” Johnson’s office referred Fox News Digital to a recent appearance by the speaker on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures,” where he said, “Heading up to the March 14 deadline, we’ll have to probably pass a clean CR instead of separate [appropriations] bills. Why? Because the Democrats in Congress were trying to demand that as a condition of appropriations, that we would somehow tie the hands of the president, limit his authority, you know, put Elon Musk in a corner and take him off of his mission.” “We’re not doing that. That’s a nonstarter, and Democrats know that, so I hope they’ll be reasonable,” he said. Thune’s office declined to comment to Fox News Digital. Last month, President Donald Trump sounded off on the shutdown deadline on Truth Social. “As usual, Sleepy Joe Biden left us a total MESS. The Budget from last YEAR is still not done. We are working very hard with the House and Senate to pass a clean, temporary government funding Bill (‘CR’) to the end of September. Let’s get it done!” he wrote.  The House Freedom Caucus has at times weaponized the House’s razor-thin majority to push for more conservative positions in negotiations and legislative matters. In the Senate, members of the more covert Steering Committee have also banded together in the past against actions by GOP leadership that they didn’t agree with.  ‘UTTER DISASTER’: LINDSEY GRAHAM CALLS FOR ZELENSKYY RESIGNATION AFTER WHITE HOUSE THROWDOWN The deadline for a partial government shutdown is March 14, and Republicans and Democrats have yet to come to an agreement on a spending measure to avoid such a fate. As Trump and billionaire Elon Musk’s DOGE has aggressively tackled perceived waste and bloat in the federal government, Democrats have expressed outrage at widespread spending cuts and federal worker layoffs. And now, with some leverage in the shutdown discussions, Democrats in Congress are demanding assurance that Trump spends the money as Congress has appropriated it, shielding it from DOGE. SEE THE STAR-STUDDED LIST OF TRUMP ALLIES DESCENDING ON DC TO CHART FURTHER 100-DAY WINS Sources familiar with previously told Fox News this could take form in a specific bill provision hamstringing DOGE. In order to pass a spending bill to avoid a partial shutdown, Republicans will need some level of Democratic support. Sixty votes are needed in the Senate, meaning at least seven Democrats will need to cross the aisle, provided that all Republicans also support it. Only a majority is needed in the House, but full Republican support of any bill is not guaranteed.

Trump urged by ‘fiscal responsibility’ group to show he’s ‘serious’ about $36T debt

Trump urged by ‘fiscal responsibility’ group to show he’s ‘serious’ about T debt

EXCLUSIVE: Ahead of President Donald Trump’s congressional address on Tuesday night, the Concord Coalition launched their new “fiscal responsibility” advocacy group, Concord Action, designed to pressure Congress to tackle America’s $36 trillion debt crisis.   Former Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux, D-GA, the new executive director and president, in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital urged Trump to show he is serious about tackling America’s debt crisis.  “I’d like to hear that he’s really serious about putting everything on the table and putting together an effort that reaches out,” Bourdeaux said. “He really needs to reach across the aisle. We know that to get the budget done, just on an annual basis, it does require Democrats to be involved. This needs to be a bipartisan effort.” Bourdeaux, a Democrat who worked with Republicans during the Great Recession to balance Georgia’s state budget, said Trump needs to lead a “bipartisan effort” that goes “line by line” through the nation’s spending.  THEME OF TRUMP’S ADDRESS TO CONGRESS REVEALED SCOOP: SPEAKER JOHNSON REVEALS GUEST LIST FOR TRUMP’S BIG SPEECH TUESDAY “It needs to be a thoughtful effort,” Bourdeaux added. “It does need to tackle the waste, fraud and abuse, but anyone who is serious about balancing the budget knows that is not enough. We really have to go line by line through all the different programs that we do, including the mandatory spending, and look at places where we can find savings and efficiencies. And we also have to put the tax side on the table as well.” The economy was the top issue for American voters in 2024, as four in 20 voters said inflation was the most important factor in their vote, according to 2024 Fox News Voter Analysis. Voters reported a negative view of the economy, with almost two-thirds rating the economy as not good, 40%, or downright poor, 24%.  TUNE IN: LIVE COVERAGE OF TRUMP’S ADDRESS TO CONGRESS TUESDAY NIGHT ON FOX NEWS “I know people approach this with a sense of despair, but it can be done. Back in the 1990s, I was actually a congressional staffer at the time. We did balance the budget. We did get together. It was done on a bipartisan basis. You know, Clinton was the president, but the House was Republican, at times the Senate was Republican. They got together, and they got it done. We really need to replicate that process again,” Bourdeaux said.  Bourdeaux said if America has balanced the budget before, then it can be done again. When former President Bill Clinton took office, the national debt was over $4 trillion, according to U.S. Treasury data. Republicans and Democrats worked across the aisle to achieve budget surpluses through legislation like the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. Bourdeaux said she wants to hear a real plan from Trump on Tuesday night.  “Right now, even getting to balance. Nobody has a plan. Nobody has anything serious on the table right now. We need to set up what that plan is going to be and then start executing it,” Bourdeaux added. Deputy White House press secretary Harrison Fields responded in a statement to Fox News Digital, “Since day one, President Trump has prioritized government efficiency, proper stewardship of taxpayer dollars, and the goal of signing a long overdue balanced budget. The Trump Administration is committed to ending the mindless spending of foreign wars, woke ideology, and unnecessary government programs that don’t serve the American people.”  Trump’s plan to slash federal spending is anchored in Elon Musk‘s leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Trump signed an executive order on Inauguration Day establishing DOGE “to maximize governmental efficiency and productivity.” The Trump administration has since directed government agencies to comply with DOGE’s departmental investigations.  According to the official DOGE website, the department has estimated $105 billion in savings, attributed to contract cancelations, workforce reductions, improper payment deletions and other regulatory changes. DOGE has drawn the praise of many Republicans and the protest of several Democrats for its aggressive action to dismantle government waste.  DOGE has inspired government officials at the city, state and federal level to prioritize efficiency, from San Francisco ordering employees back to the office, to the Environmental Protection Agency locating its own $20 billion in wasteful spending.  Sens. Pete Ricketts, R-NE, and Jacky Rosen, D-NV, introduced a new bipartisan bill last week that would require the annual presidential budget to include data on improper payments to federal agencies. Rep. Dan Meuser, R-PA, announced the Payment Integrity Information Reform Act to target overpayments by the federal government on the House side as well.  A Senate DOGE Caucus was established in November 2024 by Sen. Joni Ernst, R-IA., “to identify and eliminate government waste” and works closely with Musk’s DOGE to “promote fiscal responsibility.” The House also established the Delivering Outstanding Government Efficiency Caucus to support DOGE through legislative action. 

Trump to make ‘full-throated’ case during primetime speech: former presidential speechwriters

Trump to make ‘full-throated’ case during primetime speech: former presidential speechwriters

President Donald Trump, six weeks into his second tour of duty in the White House, vows to “TELL IT LIKE IT IS!” when he heads to Capitol Hill on Tuesday to deliver a primetime address to Congress and the nation. The president will tout his domestic and international accomplishments, spotlight what the Trump administration has done for the economy, make a renewed push for Congress to pass additional border security funding and detail his plans for peace around the globe, according to details from the White House that were shared first with Fox News. A former presidential speechwriter calls Trump’s first major speech to Congress during his second presidential administration “a big deal” and “a great platform…for a president.” “It’s a dramatic setting,” Bill McGurn, a former chief speechwriter for then-President George W. Bush, said of the speech, which is on equal footing with a State of the Union address in terms of importance. TUNE IN: LIVE COVERAGE OF TRUMP’S ADDRESS TO CONGRESS TONIGHT ON FOX NEWS McGurn said the first address to Congress by a president following their inauguration is “a great opportunity to broadcast their message far and wide.” “He’s going to make his case,” McGurn predicted. FIRST ON FOX: WHAT TRUMP WILL SAY IN HIS PRIMETIME SPEECH Trump has been moving at warp speed during his opening six weeks back in the White House with a flurry of executive orders and actions. His moves not only fulfilled some of his major campaign trail promises, but also allowed the returning president to flex his executive muscles, quickly put his stamp on the federal government, make major cuts to the federal workforce and also settle some long-standing grievances. Trump, as of Tuesday, has signed 82 executive orders since his Jan. 20 inauguration, according to a count from Fox News, which far surpasses the rate of any recent presidential predecessors during their first weeks in office. Many of the moves Trump has taken have been controversial, including threatening tariffs on major trading partners, including Canada and Mexico, upending the nation’s international agenda and freezing foreign aid, as well as a high-profile crackdown on illegal immigration. Also grabbing plenty of attention is Trump’s recently created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Trump named Elon Musk — the world’s richest person and the chief executive of Tesla and Space X — to steer DOGE. DOGE has swept through federal agencies since Trump was inaugurated, rooting out what the White House argues was billions in wasteful federal spending. It has also taken a meat cleaver to the federal workforce, resulting in a massive downsizing of employees. The moves by DOGE have triggered a slew of lawsuits in response. TOP WILDEST MOMENTS FROM PRESIDENTIAL SPEECHES TO CONGRESS “I would write it as a triumph, and I would write it looking to the future,” Clark Judge, a former speechwriter and special assistant to then-President Ronald Reagan, said when asked by Fox News Digital what he would say about DOGE if he were writing Trump’s speech. Following Friday’s jaw-dropping clash in the Oval Office between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Trump and Vice President JD Vance, what Trump says in his address to Congress regarding the Russia-Ukraine war will be closely monitored. “Undoubtedly, he’s going to explain how he sees the world,” McGurn emphasized. “Donald Trump is not shy about saying what he thinks, so he’s going to express it full-throated.” Additionally, he predicted that “there’s doing to be a lot of Republican support. Democrats, I can’t image, will be enthusiastic about anything. So it could be very dramatic. People will be looking for boos and cheers.” Dan Cluchey, former senior speechwriter for then-President Joe Biden, had his own advice for Trump. “What Donald Trump ‘should’ do is turn his focus outward on the American people rather than inward towards himself,” Cluchey told Fox News Digital. He argued that “Americans deserve an explanation as to why he is failing to address record egg prices, slashing vital funding for everything from cancer research to weather forecasting, threatening to decimate Medicaid and the Social Security Administration, torching our hard-earned heritage as the world’s chief defender of democracy, and speeding the strong economy he inherited toward an utterly unnecessary collapse.” However, Cluchey predicted that “what Donald Trump *will* do, instead, is what he always does: fabricate the record and fixate on Donald Trump.”

EU weighs $840 billion plan to ‘rearm Europe’ after US pauses Ukraine aid

EU weighs 0 billion plan to ‘rearm Europe’ after US pauses Ukraine aid

The European Union has a new plan to spend $840 billion more on its own defense after President Donald Trump paused aid to Ukraine and peace negotiations hit a wall. “I do not need to describe the grave nature of the threats that we face, or the devastating consequences that we will have to endure if those threats would come to pass,” EU Commissioner Ursula von der Leyen told reporters on Tuesday.  She said she had written a letter to the heads of state of all European governments outlining a “set of proposals” to “rearm Europe.”  “A new era is upon us,” von der Leyen wrote in the letter.  The plan details “how to use all the financial levers at our disposal in order to help member states to quickly and significantly increase expenditures in defense capabilities, urgently now, but also over [a] longer period of time, over this decade.”  EUROPE MUST LEAD ON UKRAINIAN SECURITY GUARANTEES, GREEK FOREIGN MINISTER SAYS: ‘WE ARE THE NEIGHBORS’ Countries in the EU would have access to loans of up to $158 billion for defense investment, according to the proposal. It also calls for relaxing strict debt ceilings agreed to by the bloc for defense spending.  “This will allow member states to significantly increase their defense expenditures without triggering the excessive deficit procedure,” she said, referring to the rule that requires nations to bring their deficits down if they breach a certain amount.  The proposal also involves using the existing EU budget to “direct more funds towards defense-related investments.” “With this equipment, member states can massively step up their support to Ukraine. So, immediate military equipment for Ukraine,” she said. The new defense plan comes as Washington recalibrates its relationship with Europe, and conservative Republicans push Trump to lead efforts to pull the U.S. out of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).  European leaders held an emergency summit over the weekend in London to discuss how to support Ukraine after the Oval Office meeting between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy brought peace negotiations to an abrupt halt.  At that summit, European leaders discussed ways to keep military aid flowing, increase economic pressure on Russia, and establish a “coalition of the willing” of European nations ready to offer forces to act as a safeguard against another invasion by Russia once the two sides reach a peace agreement.  EUROPEAN LEADERS ON EDGE AS PROSPECT LOOMS OF TRUMP PULLING 20K TROOPS FROM CONTINENT “This is a moment for Europe, and we are ready to step up,” said von der Leyen.  Even France’s Marine Le Pen, leader of the conservative National Rally party, called the U.S. action a form of “brutality.”  “I consider the brutality of this decision to be reprehensible,” she said of the move to pause aid.  “It is very cruel for Ukrainian soldiers engaged in a patriotic defense of their country,” she insisted, adding that it was “very questionable” not to give the Ukrainians a warning before doing so.  The temporary pause will apply to all U.S. military aid not yet in Ukraine. It is expected to last until the White House determines that Zelenskyy is committed to peace talks. “We are pausing and reviewing our aid to ensure that it is contributing to a solution,” a White House official said. After President Joe Biden shipped over a $500 million aid package on his way out the door in January, some $3.86 billion from previously approved aid packages remains, a defense official told Fox News Digital, including Guided Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (GMLRS) and anti-tank weapons and thousands of artillery rounds and armored vehicles.