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Trump says Mike Johnson will ‘easily remain speaker’ if he acts ‘decisively and tough’ on spending bill

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EXCLUSIVE: President-elect Donald Trump told Fox News Digital that House Speaker Mike Johnson will “easily remain speaker” for the next Congress if he “acts decisively and tough” and eliminates “all of the traps being set by Democrats” in the spending package. 

Fox News Digital spoke exclusively with the president-elect Thursday morning, just hours after the bipartisan deal to avoid a partial government shutdown was killed. 

“Anybody that supports a bill that doesn’t take care of the Democrat quicksand known as the debt ceiling should be primaried and disposed of as quickly as possible,” Trump told Fox News Digital. 

Vice President-elect JD Vance met with House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., Wednesday night. The two spoke about the potential continuing resolution for about an hour. Vance said the two had a “productive conversation,” and said he believes they will “be able to solve some problems here” and will continue “working on it.” 

Mike Johnson, Donald Trump

U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson shakes hands with U.S. President-elect Trump onstage at a House Republicans Conference meeting at the Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill Nov. 13, 2024, in Washington, D.C.  (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

The chaos surrounding the effort to pass legislation to avert a government shutdown is putting the upcoming speaker vote in focus, as Johnson has struggled to keep the party fully united. 

But the president-elect told Fox News Digital that Johnson will “easily” keep his role as speaker. 

“If the speaker acts decisively, and tough, and gets rid of all of the traps being set by the Democrats, which will economically and, in other ways, destroy our country, he will easily remain speaker,” Trump told Fox News Digital. 

The speaker vote is set for Jan. 3, 2025. 

The now-dead-on-arrival 1,547-page bill was set to be a short-term extension of fiscal year (FY) 2024 government funding levels, aimed at giving lawmakers more time to agree on funding the rest of FY 2025 by the Friday deadline.

In addition to funding the government through March 14, the bill included more than $100 billion in disaster aid to help Americans affected by Hurricanes Milton and Helene. It also included $10 billion in economic relief for farmers, as well as health care reform measures and a provision aimed at revitalizing Washington, D.C.’s RFK stadium and its surrounding campus.

The bill also proposed a pay raise for members of Congress. 

Members of the House Freedom Caucus said they felt blindsided by what they saw as unrelated policy riders being added to the bill in last-minute negotiations.

Several GOP lawmakers granted anonymity to speak freely said Johnson would see challenges to his speakership bid in early January over the matter.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. 

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James Madison football star empties the quiver in celebration during bowl game win

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James Madison Dukes defensive lineman Eric O’Neill picked up a key sack in a win against the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers on Wednesday night in the Boca Raton Bowl.

O’Neill then celebrated the sack by emptying the quiver on Hilltoppers quarterback Caden Veltkamp. It was not the only time he performed the celebration either, and college football fans on social media noticed.

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Eric O'Neill celebrates

James Madison defensive lineman Eric O’Neill, #99, reacts after making a play against Western Kentucky running back Elijah Young during the first half of the Boca Raton Bowl NCAA college football game on Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024 in Boca Raton, Florida. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

O’Neill had three tackles, including one sack, as James Madison won the game 27-17.

“It’s surreal. It’s probably the best moment of my life,” he told ESPN after the win. “We got a bunch of (Football Bowl Championship) guys nobody wanted out of high school. Now, finished the season 9-4, winning bowl games at JMU. You can’t even dream of this.”

He was asked about the celebrations after the game as well.

“It was just working hard, getting there and the celebration, I’m a big UFC fan so it was one of those,” he said, via The Breeze. “I don’t blame them if they … if I’m an offensive lineman and someone did that to my quarterback, I’d probably want to push them.”

It was the Dukes’ first bowl win as a Football Bowl Subdivision team. They moved up from the FCS prior to the 2022 season. Curt Cignetti, who is now the coach at Indiana, was James Madison’s head coach for their first two years at the highest level of college football.

Bob Chesney holds the trophy

James Madison punter Ryan Hanson, rear, center, reacts as James Madison head coach Bob Chesney, front, center, holds the Howard Schnellenberger trophy after defeating Western Kentucky in the Boca Raton Bowl NCAA college football game on Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024 in Boca Raton, Florida. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

TRAVIS, JASON KELCE CRITICAL OF OHIO LAWMAKER’S BILL OUTLAWING FLAG PLANTING ON BUCKEYES’ FIELD: ‘FEELS SOFT’

Bob Chesney took over after Cignetti left the team for the Hoosiers and guided the team to the bowl win.

O’Neill, a redshirt-junior from New York, transferred from Long Island University before the start of the 2024 season. He played in his first bowl game with a bunch of other teammates.

Caden Veltkamp pressured

Western Kentucky quarterback Caden Veltkamp, #10, looks to pass as he is pressured by James Madison cornerback KJ Flowe, #14, and defensive lineman Immanuel Bush, #15, during the second half of the Boca Raton Bowl NCAA college football game on Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024 in Boca Raton, Florida. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

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He wrapped up his first season at James Madison as a First Team All-Sun Belt Conference defensive lineman. He had 13 tackles and 52 total tackles. He also returned an interception for a touchdown.

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Pamela Anderson says being ‘sexualized’ made life ‘difficult’ for young sons

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It’s always a jarring realization for a child to learn their parents have a whole life outside of caring for them, eclipsing the narrative that they are just Mom or Dad. 

For Pamela Anderson’s sons, they were confronted with the reality that their mother is a sex symbol, a label Anderson says she eventually accepted after having it oversaturated in the media and heavily fixated upon by the public.

Years removed from her historic 14 covers of Playboy Magazine or her iconic swim run in “Baywatch,” Anderson spoke about how being sexualized impacted her sons, Brandon and Dylan, who she shares with ex-husband and Mötley Crüe drummer, Tommy Lee.

PAMELA ANDERSON SUFFERED ‘DEBILITATING’ SHYNESS BEFORE DOING PLAYBOY: ‘HATED THE WAY I LOOKED’

Pamela Anderson lays seductively across a couch wearing a pink sleeveless sweater and white pants with her hand under her chin

Pamela Anderson has been known as one of Hollywood’s most recognizable sex symbols for decades. (Getty Images)

In a new episode from Variety Studio: Actors on Actors, Anderson reflected on her life choices, admitting that sexualization was “difficult” not only for her, but also for her sons.

“Being a working mom and being in this entertainment world and even having your mom be sexualized in some way, like a lot of the things I went through, I didn’t realize my kids were going through them at the same time. So, as adult children, we talk about that a lot,” she told actress Mikey Madison of her sons, 28 and 26, respectively. “You kind of beg forgiveness for your adult children,” she said.

Pamela Anderson smiles and looks down at her son Brandon wearing red shoes and a red hat

Pamela Anderson, photographed with son Brandon in 1997, didn’t realize how the media’s hypersexualization of her impacted her sons. (S. Granitz/WireImage/Getty Images)

Pamela Anderson smiling in a black jacket sans makeup

In a conversation with Variety’s “Actors on Actors,” Pamela Anderson said “You kind of beg forgiveness for your adult children.” (Alexi Lubomirski for Variety)

In a 2019 interview on “The View,” Anderson admitted she was predominately able to shield her kids from the sex symbol moniker: “I kept them out of the limelight. They went to school in Canada.”

In terms of explicit images, Anderson said they didn’t become an issue until her boys were teens.

“They didn’t see anything like that probably till high school. And I was waiting – age appropriately – to kind of tell them you don’t do these things thinking you’re going to horrify your children, but of course it does,” she said, noting there had been “a few fistfights at school” as a result of the images.

“Having your mom be sexualized in some way, like a lot of the things I went through, I didn’t realize my kids were going through them at the same time.”

— Pamela Anderson

Dylan Lee in a white shirt and black thin vest and Brandon Lee in a black jacket and navy shirt on the carpet

Dylan Jagger Lee, 26, and Brandon Thomas Lee, 28, pose for a photo in Beverly Hills, Calif., in April 2024. (Gilbert Flores/WWD via Getty Images)

But Anderson is adamant that she’s not ashamed of her past. The star, who has made a resurgence partially due to her portrayal of a veteran performer in the upcoming film, “The Last Showgirl,” said she was able to pull from her past for this particular role.

The actress, 57, explained during the “Actors on Actors” conversation that she was “able to bring a lot of my own personal experience, my kind of long life of dealing with beauty and glamour and aging and reassessing life choices,” to the movie, a role that secured Anderson her first Golden Globe nomination. “So I got to bring my whole life, really, into this role. It was such a relief to be able to play something where I could express myself that way,” she continued.

“I’m not ashamed of my life. I’m not ashamed of the choices that I made, even though maybe in hindsight I would’ve done things differently. But you need life experience to know that you would’ve done that differently.”

 “I think the past shouldn’t dictate your future. And I really like to live in the moment, and I really want to enjoy this time in my life. But looking back in hindsight, I was always creating characters. And I feel like – I know I’ve created a few Halloween costumes, even. But they were memorable characters, so I just take it as a compliment.”

Pamela Anderson in a latex pink and red outfit smiles next to Tommy Lee in a white tank top

This look by Pamela Anderson and her ex-husband, Tommy Lee, has become a popular Halloween costume for people to replicate. (S. Granitz/WireImage)

Creating characters was a way for Anderson to manage the media’s rampant interest in her. But before embracing it, she did her best to avoid any of that chatter altogether.

“I was really clear,” she told Dax Shepard last year while on his podcast, Armchair Expert. “I don’t want tabloids around me, including every magazine. I just wouldn’t have it around me, because, of course, you’d find yourself looking at something and getting really hurt by it. So I said, ‘I just can’t see it. Please don’t have it near me.'”

“I just took it out of my eyesight, but then, you know, I’d go on a trip to Europe or something,” saying that headlines were outrageous. She remembered thinking, “Who is that person? Who are they talking about?” 

“I’m half naked on the cover of different things and all over the place, like I’ve turned into a cartoon character. Then I started playing into the cartoon character.”

Pamela Anderson with on leg up on a table holding power tools in a purple lace bodysuit for 'Home Improvement'

Pamela Anderson in a photo for the show “Home Improvement.” (ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images)

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She reiterated this in an interview with Better Homes & Gardens in August after hitting a slew of carpets without wearing any makeup.

“That was the beginning of me letting go of the image I had always had of myself. ‘What is this cartoon character that I’d created? OK, that was fun. But I’m not that person anymore.’ It was a dance I was doing that I was only partly aware of. And looking back, I can see why I did it,” she said. “But I’ve always been into being a homemaker, too. All the kids were always at our house. I cooked for everybody, pots of spaghetti for the neighborhood, and so my kids have always seen that part of me. And it hurt them to think that those other things are the only things people think of their mom. Yes, she’s been in Playboy. Yes, she’s done all these things, but we know who she is. It’s different now.”

After being packaged to the public as a sex symbol for years, Anderson’s take on aging might be different from a lot of Hollywood stars.

Pamela Anderson in 1995 wearing a black blouse smiling showing her teeth with bright blonde hair split Pamela Anderson in a cream blouse with no makeup in 2024

Pamela Anderson has chosen to change her look in recent years by no longer wearing makeup, photographed in 1995, left, and 2024. (S. Granitz/WireImage/Getty Images/Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

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“I can’t wait to see myself old. I always said I’d recognize myself when I was old in the mirror. I want to let my hair go kind of natural gray, put my little straw hat on, don’t wear makeup. I mean, that’s my comfortable kind of state,” she told Shepard, admitting that “classic beauties” are the ones having “a really hard time with aging.”

“I always felt a little funny-looking, so I don’t think it’s as hard for me, and I don’t want to chase that, and I don’t want to do all the crazy s— to myself,” she added.

Pamela Anderson smiles directly at the camera, wearing no makeup at an event

Pamela Anderson says she’s much happier not wearing any makeup and embracing her natural beauty. (Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty Images)

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Hence, no makeup on red carpets.

“Chasing youth is just futile,” she said while attending the Victoria Beckham show this year. “You’re never going to get there. So why not embrace what’s going on? And since I’ve really walked out the door as me, I feel like a relief, just a weight off my shoulders. And I actually like it better. I’m dressing for me now, not for everybody else.”



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Titans head coach goes on explicit tirade when asked about team being soft: ‘Total bulls—‘

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Do not call the Tennessee Titans soft.

It has been a struggle for the Titans, as they sit at 3-11 with a depleted roster and seemingly no quarterback after 2023 second-round pick Will Levis was benched.

They may not be good, but they for sure play with pride, according to head coach Brian Callahan.

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Brian Callahan

Tennessee Titans head coach Brian Callahan argues a call during the third quarter at Nissan Stadium. (Danielle Parhizkaran/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Callahan was asked on Wednesday about the notion that he coaches a “soft” team, and he went on a nearly two-minute rant in an effort to silence the critics.

“You really want to get me going today? To be honest with you, I think that’s complete and total bulls—, if you want my honest opinion,” Callahan began. “These guys are tough f—ers, man. They go after it every day, they play hard as hell. At no point have we ever put on tape, at any point this season, that this is a soft football team. I can’t even wrap my mind around how that would even be a conversation. Just because we don’t win games doesn’t mean we’re soft. These guys play their a– off, they play hard, they play physical …”

Will Levis walks off

Tennessee Titans quarterback Will Levis, #8, walks off the field after an NFL football game against the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024 in Nashville, Tennessee. The Bengals won 37-27. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)

“That means you just don’t watch this s—. You don’t do anything about it, you don’t know what you’re talking about, you don’t know what you’re looking at. I’m not gonna stand for anybody calling this football team soft. I think that’s bulls—. If there’s opinions out there that feel that way, they don’t know anything about NFL football. I’d like you to walk in there and call one of these guys soft and see what happens. This is not a soft football team at all mentally or physically …”

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“There’s no possible explanation to say this team is soft in any way, shape or form, mentally or physically. The way they go about their work, it’s insulting to me, to them, to everyone who works here. No chance ever in hell would I ever admit that to be the case, and neither would anybody in this locker room. You can shove that one right up your a–, to be honest with you.”

The Titans were able to pull off an upset in Houston against their AFC South rival Texans, but they have lost each of their three games since then.

Earlier this season, they traded DeAndre Hopkins to the Kansas City Chiefs, as he was unable to revert to his old form.

Jordan Addison touchdown

Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Jordan Addison, #3, catches a 47-yard touchdown pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Tennessee Titans on Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024 in Nashville, Tennessee. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)

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Tennessee will finish their season with games against each of their division rivals, and surely, Callahan is hoping that his team can show that his words ring true.

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Congress battles over looming government shutdown and more top headlines

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Good morning and welcome to Fox News’ morning newsletter, Fox News First. And here’s what you need to know to start your day…

TOP 3

1. Trump issues new spending bill demands.

2. Christian school shooting victims identified.

3. Amazon workers walk off the job.

MAJOR HEADLINES

FACING JUSTICE – Accused Ivy League killer expected to end legal fight, waive extradition. Continue reading …

‘CLEARLY SUSPECT’ – NYC mayor hammers Biden-Harris admin over the timing of indictment. Continue reading …

DRAIN THE SWAMP – DOGE Caucus leader pitches first bill to slash wasteful government spending. Continue reading …

MAJOR COLLISION – Train derails after hitting tractor-trailer then collides with city building. Continue reading …

TROUBLED WATERS – Chaotic moment before cruise passenger’s death caught on video. Continue reading …

POLITICS

POWER PLAY – Republicans’ new Trump card for the 2026 midterms after sweeping election victory. Continue reading …

‘FORWARD-THINKING FRAMEWORK’ – Experts praise Congress’ highly-anticipated AI report. Continue reading …

MOVING ON – Paris Hilton-backed bill aimed at stopping abuse heads to Biden’s desk. Continue reading …

PUSH TO START – Trump aims to roll back Biden’s EV push: How it would affect consumers. Continue reading …

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MEDIA

MAKING AN IMPACT – Trump may have ‘broken’ Trudeau government in transition period. Continue reading …

‘I TOLD YOU SO’ – Colorado official livid after suspected migrant gang apprehended in home invasion. Continue reading …

CLEAR COVERAGE – ABC, CBS and NBC ‘almost uniformly negative’ about Trump’s Cabinet, study finds. Continue reading …

‘NEVER QUITE GOT THE POINT’ – NYT columnist throws in towel on ‘Never Trump’ label. Continue reading …

OPINION

DAN GAINOR – Liberal media has defended this nonsensical war on words. Continue reading …

HUGH HEWITT – How long will Democrats’ exile from the White House last? Continue reading …

 

IN OTHER NEWS

LIFTING THE LID – Pain reliever you likely have in your cabinet should be ‘carefully considered.’ Continue reading …

‘I LOVE HIM’ – President-elect Trump’s eldest granddaughter Kai shares celebrity crush. Continue reading …

AMERICAN CULTURE QUIZ – Test yourself on festive flavors, seasonal sales, historic heroes? Take the quiz here …

TIS THE SEASON – Having a Christmas gathering this year? The feast will cost more this year. Continue reading …

CASTLE CONFECTION – Woman spins gingerbread magic. See video …

 

WATCH

PATTY MORIN – The Trump team is ‘moving so quickly’ to address border crisis. See video …

RYAN, MELISSA BEELER – Husband takes on wife’s dare to dress up as character from beloved holiday classic in NYC. See video …

 

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Caitlin Clark backlash to White privilege remarks proves there’s ‘issues with race’ in US, WNBA great says

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WNBA legend Sue Bird and former U.S. women’s soccer star Megan Rapinoe weighed in on the backlash over Caitlin Clark’s remarks about White privilege in her interview with Time magazine.

The Indiana Fever star spoke about her supposed White privilege as she said the WNBA has been built on the backs of Black players.

“The more we can appreciate that, highlight that, talk about that and then continue to have brands and companies invest in those players that have made this league incredible, I think it’s very important,” Clark said in the interview last week. “I have to continue to try to change that. The more we can elevate Black women, that’s going to be a beautiful thing.”

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Caitlin Clark at Sun game

Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark, #22, walks past the photo backdrop on Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2024 during a game between the Indiana Fever and the Connecticut Sun at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. (Grace Smith/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

Clark’s reaction sparked a ton of backlash on social media.

Bird said on the latest episode of her podcast with Rapinoe, “A Touch More,” that the anger around the White privilege comments proved something about her fans.

“Now this faction of her fanbase which we’ve discussed before that is now disgusted with her acknowledging is just showing they were never really here for basketball,” Bird said. “… Which by the way just proves that there are issues with race in this country. Like, to me, that just proves it. And I think where I’ve landed is I’d almost want to pose some questions.”

Bird then wondered whether there would have been any outrage about the incidents Clark was involved in during the course of her rookie season if she were Black.

“I personally think she deserves to be Time Athlete of the Year,” Bird continued. “I think she earned that, and she’s like, yeah, ‘I’ve done enough to earn this,’ and I agree and also is acknowledging her White privilege and that is something that you know you’re talking about your experience, that’s something I’ve had to acknowledge in my experience. I’ve won the championships, I’ve done the things, and there’s this other part to it that I’m also going to acknowledge. 

“And that to me is just is the world we live in and to say it doesn’t exist is really saying you don’t live in the same world, or you’re not seeing the same things and that’s obviously the root of all the conversations that we see today, not just in women’s basketball, literally in our country period.”

Bird added that, at the end of the day, her race did not score points.

CAITLIN CLARK’S JERSEY NUMBER TO BE RETIRED BY IOWA

Megan Rapinoe and Sue Bird

Sue Bird, left, and Megan Rapinoe look on in the first quarter between the United States and France in the men’s basketball gold medal game during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Accor Arena in Paris on Aug. 10, 2024. (Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Rapinoe took a shot at conservatives in her assessment.

“I think what Caitlin did in her quotes, or in the article, was speak explicitly about her White privilege, like and that is what is receiving so much criticism or backlash, and like that is the lesson,” the former NWSL star said. “So, you know, for conservative media coming at her now that obviously they’re just showing their whole a–.

“If fans are upset about her saying that and just acknowledging what is true, I think that says a lot. But I think the more that you speak directly to it the clearer it becomes what your stance is, and then you can’t be used in that way. It doesn’t really leave your beliefs or your stance as a white player to any sort of interpretation. 

“You’re taking the space and owning the narrative yourself. I think another thing that I’m constantly trying to think of and be aware of, and I want other people to be aware of also, anytime there is a positive story in women’s sports, the area, the sort of quote unquote area is immediately flooded with divisive narratives.

“But for all of us to just be aware of that, that anytime there’s anything positive or any honestly just any news at all in women’s sports, it’s just like immediately flooded with insanity and really divisive narratives. And I think to that, like when we as athletes are being used, when is your narrative, when is your likes being used, when are the things that you’re saying being used.

Caitlin Clark and Lisa Bluder

Lisa Bluder, left, and Caitlin Clark talk during practice for the NCAA women’s college basketball championship game between Iowa and South Carolina on April 6, 2024. (Zach Boyden-Holmes / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

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“You know the sort of like ecosystem of people in women’s sports that really do care about whether it’s you know athletes, fans, owners, people that work with teams, whatever. Like when are you being used by this like, sort of meta narrative or these like divisive narratives and to be really smart about that.”

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Palestinian Authority under pressure amid rising resistance, popularity of Iran-backed terror groups

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The Palestinian Authority (PA) is facing a growing challenge in the northern West Bank city of Jenin as it launches an ongoing operation against local terror factions supported by Iran, a crackdown that has sparked violent clashes and highlighted the deepening rift between the PA and local communities.

“Iran has been funding militants to buy weapons, and now the Palestinian Authority is acting to stop that. They’ve taken measures to block the money and crack down on the factions. The PA knows Iran will keep supporting Hamas and Islamic Jihad, and this is the challenge they face. It’s the right time to confront Iran, especially after the wars in Gaza and Lebanon- public mood is not welcoming any military confrontation with Israel after what happened,” Mohammad Daraghmeh, Asharq News bureau chief in Ramallah, told Fox News Digital.

The U.S. has reportedly requested Israel’s approval to deliver urgent military assistance to the PA as it intensifies its crackdown on terror organizations in Jenin, Axios reported. The Biden administration is seeking to provide the PA security forces with ammunition, helmets, bulletproof vests, armored cars and other essential items, but needs Israel’s consent to proceed. Historically, U.S. assistance to the PA has ranged between $200 million and $300 million annually. In recent years, especially after the Biden administration took office, there has been a resumption of aid to the PA, following a freeze during the Trump administration.

HAMAS ATTACKER OPENS FIRE AT ISRAELI BUS IN WEST BANK, INJURING AT LEAST 8: REPORT

Mourners shout during the funeral of 19-year-old Rahbi Shalabi, who was killed during clashes between Palestinian security forces and militants a day earlier, in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin on Dec. 10, 2024.

Mourners shout during the funeral of 19-year-old Rahbi Shalabi, who was killed during clashes between Palestinian security forces and militants a day earlier, in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin on Dec. 10, 2024. (ZAIN JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images)

“Since October 7th, there has been an increased push from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, with significant Iranian involvement,” said Dr. Michael Milshtein, head of the Forum for Palestinian Studies at Tel Aviv University who further emphasized the shift in the situation since Oct. 7, noting the influence of Iranian-backed forces. “They’re trying to push operations in the West Bank, and there have been attempts to manufacture rockets and fire them at Israeli cities from Jenin. While it’s still in the early stages and these efforts are unsuccessful, it’s a troubling development that signals how Jenin is evolving into a central hub for terrorists.”

Last weekend, PA security forces killed Yazid Jaysa, an Islamic Jihad commander, in an operation that has intensified tensions in the region. This was the third death in Jenin within a week, following the killing of 19-year-old Rahbi Shalabi during gunfights between PA forces and local militants. The deaths have further fueled the discontent in the city, particularly among residents of the Jenin refugee camp. “The entire refugee camp is now against the PA,” said Daraghmeh.

On Sunday, reports surfaced that the PA had positioned its forces outside the refugee camp, but attempts to enter were met with resistance. The terrorists inside the camp, many of whom have vowed to fight the PA’s forces, pose a significant challenge to the PA’s plans for reasserting control.

PALESTINIAN PRESIDENT ABBAS SAYS US IS THE ‘ONLY POWER’ CAPABLE OF ORDERING ISRAEL TO END THE WAR

Palestinian Authority security forces vehicles block a road amid clashes with militants in the Jenin camp in the Israel-occupied West Bank on Dec. 15, 2024. For more than a week, the northern West Bank city of Jenin has seen intense violence, after the PA, which coordinates security matters with Israel, arrested several militants.

Palestinian Authority security forces vehicles block a road amid clashes with militants in the Jenin camp in the Israel-occupied West Bank on Dec. 15, 2024. For more than a week, the northern West Bank city of Jenin has seen intense violence, after the PA, which coordinates security matters with Israel, arrested several militants. (ZAIN JAAFAR/AFP via Getty Images)

“There’s no active fighting right now, but the PA forces are stuck. They’ve tried to enter, but failed, and now they’re stuck outside,” said Daraghmeh. “They can’t leave, but they can’t continue the operation either, because there are dozens of militants ready to confront them.”

Milshtein, the former head of Palestinian affairs in Israeli Defense Forces military intelligence, told Fox News Digital, “The PA does not have the ability to enforce control in northern Samaria and the surrounding areas. The PA has lost control of these regions, and for years, Israel has treated Jenin and the surrounding areas like Gaza- without PA control mechanisms, and essentially, there’s a real vacuum.”

Biden, Abbas, US, Palestinians

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, right, and President Biden shake hands in the West Bank town of Bethlehem on Friday, July 15, 2022. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

The timing of the PA’s operation is significant, with many observers noting that it coincides with the broader regional context, including the ongoing war in Gaza and the fall of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Milshtein believes that the events in Syria played a role in the PA’s decision to act. “People in the West Bank say that when one dictator (PA President Mahmoud Abbas) saw what happened to the other (Bashar al-Assad), he decided he would not follow the same fate,” Milshtein explained. “Mahmoud Abbas likely felt that he needed to act before the PA’s authority in the West Bank completely erodes.”

The operation, which is part of a larger crackdown in the northern West Bank, also reflects the PA’s desire to assert itself as a capable authority ahead of potential political developments in Gaza. The PA has long struggled with its ability to govern Gaza, which it lost to Hamas in 2007. Now, with the region in turmoil, it is hoping to prove that it can restore order in the West Bank, which it argues will bolster its legitimacy in any postwar political scenario for Gaza.

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A Palestinian security man fires tear gas at protesters in the center of the West Bank city of Jenin and its camp on Dec. 16, 2024.

A Palestinian security man fires tear gas at protesters in the center of the West Bank city of Jenin and its camp on Dec. 16, 2024. (Nasser Ishtayeh/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

“I don’t see a possibility that the PA will control Gaza,” Milshtein said, “There are two million people there. For 17 years, they have been ruled by Hamas, and 60% were born after Hamas took control. They were educated to view the PA as collaborators with Israel and enemies. Giving the PA two hours in Gaza is a known failure from the outset.”

Despite the violence in Jenin, Daraghmeh does not foresee the conflict spreading beyond. “People in Ramallah, Hebron and other cities don’t want the West Bank to turn into another Gaza,” Daraghmeh said. “The situation in Jenin is contained, but it remains a test for the PA’s ability to control its own territory.”

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NYT columnist throws in towel on ‘Never Trump’ label: We ‘never quite got the point’ of the MAGA movement

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New York Times columnist Bret Stephens appears to be giving up on the “Never Trump” identity he embraced during the first Trump era, realizing that he and his media colleagues missed the mark following the 2024 election. 

“It’s been more than nine years since I first denounced Donald Trump as a ‘loudmouth vulgarian appealing to quieter vulgarians.’  I’ve called myself a Never Trump conservative ever since, even when I agreed with his policies from time to time. I also opposed him throughout his run this year,” Stephens began his column, “Done With Never Trump,” Tuesday. 

“Could his second term be as bad as his most fervent critics fear? Yes. Is it time to drop the heavy moralizing and incessant doomsaying that typified so much of the Never Trump movement — and that rendered it politically impotent and frequently obtuse? Yes, please,” he conceded. 

JD VANCE CRITICIZES NY TIMES READER FOR ‘WHINING’ ABOUT ELDERLY NEIGHBOR’S PRAYERS: ‘STOP BEING A WEIRDO’ 

Bret Stephens

New York Times columnist Bret Stephens says he’s “done with Never Trump” after being an outspoken critic of President-elect Donald Trump for nearly a decade. (Screenshot/HBO)

Stephens acknowledged that Trump’s “sulfurous contempt” for the political elite, his “refusal to be shaped by their norms” and his “willingness to call out their hypocrisy” makes him a “hero” to his supporters, something of which he and other Never Trumpers “never quite got the point.”

“It wasn’t that we’d forgotten Clinton’s scandals or were ignorant of the allegations about the Bidens. It’s that we thought Trump degraded the values that conservatives were supposed to stand for. We also thought that Trump represented a form of illiberalism that was antithetical to our ‘free people, free markets, free world’ brand of conservatism and that was bound to take the Republican Party down a dark road,” Stephens wrote. 

“In this we weren’t wrong: There’s plenty to dislike and fear about Trump from a traditionally conservative standpoint. But Never Trumpers also overstated our case and, in doing so, defeated our purpose.”

TRUMP MAKES BLIZZARD OF NEWS, SHOWS RESTRAINT AT PRESSER, EVEN WHILE SLAMMING THE MEDIA

President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at Mar-a-Lago, on Monday, Dec. 16, 2024, in Palm Beach, Fla. 

President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at Mar-a-Lago, on Monday, Dec. 16, 2024, in Palm Beach, Fla.  (AP/Evan Vucci)

The Times columnist went on to list several concessions, like his failed prediction that Trump “might stumble into World War III” as president, how the Russia collusion allegations “were a smear” and that Trump was “much tougher” on the Kremlin than the Obama and Biden administrations before the Ukraine war. 

“We predicted that Trump’s rhetoric would wreck the Republican Party’s chances to win over the constituencies the party had identified, after 2012, as key to its future. But we missed that his working-class appeal would also reach working-class minorities — like the 48 percent of Latino male voters who cast their ballots for him last month,” Stephens told readers. “And we were alarmed by Trump’s protectionism and big-spending ways. But the economy mostly thrived under him, at least until the pandemic.”

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Stephens also admitted that he and other “elites” prioritized the issue of “democracy” while average voters cared about inflation and the immigration crisis. 

“Why did Trump — so often deprecated by his critics as a fortunate fool — understand this so well while we fecklessly carried on about the soul of the nation?” Stephens asked himself. 

“What else did we not sufficiently appreciate? That, as much as Trump might lie, Americans also felt lied to by the left — particularly when it came to the White House-cover-up of Biden’s physical and mental decline. That, as bigoted as elements of the MAGA world can be, there is plenty of bigotry to go around — not least in the torrent of Israel-bashing and antisemitism that emerged from the cultural left after Oct. 7. That, as much as we fear Trump could wreck some of our institutions, whether it’s higher education or the F.B.I., many of those institutions are already broken and may need to be reconceived or replaced.”

Bret Stephens New York Times columnist

Stephens admitted Never Trumpers “never quite got the point” of the MAGA movement.  (William B. Plowman/NBC/NBC Newswire/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)

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The longtime Trump critic is vowing to keep an open mind about the second Trump presidency, and urged other Never Trumpers to do the same.

“Let’s enter the new year by wishing the new administration well, by giving some of Trump’s cabinet picks the benefit of the doubt, by dropping the lurid historical comparisons to past dictators, by not sounding paranoid about the ever-looming end of democracy, by hoping for the best and knowing that we need to fight the wrongs that are real and not merely what we fear, that whatever happens, this too shall pass,” Stephens said.

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Idaho Board of Education bans DEI offices and initiatives in all public universities

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The Idaho Board of Education approved efforts to ban diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives in public universities on Wednesday. 

After months of debating, the board unanimously agreed on a resolution that Idaho institutions cannot “require specific structures or activities related to DEI.”

In summary, institutions “shall establish and maintain equality of opportunity for all students regardless of personal identity characteristics,” “ensure that no central offices, policies, procedures, or initiatives are dedicated to DEI ideology” and “ensure that no employee or student is required to declare gender identity or preferred pronouns.”

The board defined DEI ideology as “any approach that prioritizes ‘personal identity characteristics’ (race, color, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, religion, or gender identity) over individual merit.”

woman sitting in classroom with laptop next to words "diversity equity inclusion"

The Idaho Board of Education unanimously approved the resolution to scale back on programs that discriminate based on race. (iStock)

FLORIDA PERMANENTLY BANS FUNDING FOR DEI IN STATE SCHOOLS

In addition to banning mandatory gender identification, the board also prohibited diversity statements in hiring practices or any decisions regarding employment or education based on “personal identity characteristics.” 

The board also approved a resolution that mandated protections for free speech and expression on campuses.

“Institutions shall maintain political neutrality, protect speakers’ rights to free expression, protect the safety of those participating in constitutionally protected speech, introduce campus communities to diverse viewpoints, and establish programs designed to educate students and faculty about the institutions’ role as the marketplace of ideas,” it read.

The board acknowledged that the resolution would not prohibit universities from promoting non-discriminatory activities, offering scholarships or allowing student clubs based on “political or social issues.”

All changes are expected to be implemented by June 30, 2025.

In a press release given to Fox News Digital, the board reiterated its support for the resolution and optimism for the universities moving forward.

University of Idaho school sign on overcast day

Public universities will be required to uphold freedom of expression on campuses. (Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)

“I believe our actions as a Board today are a strong signal to all Idaho students that our institutions are prepared to meet whatever needs they have when they walk through the door. I am looking forward to seeing our universities implement these resolutions while we continue working on the issue as a Board,” Board President Dr. Linda Clark said.

“I am proud of our institutions for stepping up and making meaningful changes to their institutions through these resolutions,” Joshua Whitworth, Director of the Office of the State Board of Education said. “By working closely with our institutions and the Governor’s Office, the Board has made a commitment that every student has the support that they need to succeed.”

The resolution was originally adopted in April 2023 and focused primarily on prohibiting diversity statements in hiring. The following year, the resolution was amended to codify the language and later included prohibiting diversity statements in admissions.

IOWA BOARD OF REGENTS APPROVES RECOMMENDATIONS TO SCALE BACK DEI INITIATIVES AT STATE UNIVERSITIES

In November, the Board introduced drafts of the new resolution and received feedback from both university leaders and students. Since that time, several universities have already begun scaling back on DEI initiatives.

Boise State University

Boise State University closed its Gender Equity and Student Equity centers in November. (Sarah A. Miller/Idaho Statesman/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

On Tuesday, ahead of the resolution, Boise State University announced in an email that the Student Equity Center and the Gender Equity Center had been closed during Thanksgiving break.

“We all have heard the conversations taking place this year across the nation related to diversity, equity and inclusion and higher education,” BSU administrators said in the email. “The Idaho State Board of Education has developed resolutions for Idaho universities, and we have provided feedback. We remain steadfast in our commitment to serving all students while seeking to be responsive to our governing board’s expectations.”

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FAA announces temporary restrictions on certain drone flights in New Jersey

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The Federal Aviation Administration issued temporary flight restrictions prohibiting drone flights over parts of New Jersey following an influx of sightings in recent weeks.

The notice, which expires Jan. 17, 2025, said drone operations in support of national defense, homeland security, law enforcement, firefighting, search and rescue or disaster response missions are not included in the restrictions.

Commercial drone operations are allowed with a valid statement of work, but there must be an approved special governmental interest airspace waiver and all applicable FAA regulations must be followed.

RAND PAUL BLOCKS BILL RESPONDING TO DRONE SIGHTINGS: SHOULDN’T RUSH TO GRANT ‘SWEEPING SURVEILLANCE POWERS’

A map indicating drone density in Monmouth County, New Jersey. 

A map indicating drone density in Monmouth County, New Jersey.  (Courtesy: Monmouth County Sheriff’s Office)

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said the White House, and more broadly the U.S. government, does not seem concerned about the increased sightings in New Jersey and other northeastern states.

“Look, I’m the speaker of the House. I have the exact same frustrations that you do and all of us do. We don’t have the answers. The administration is not providing them,” Johnson said in a Fox News appearance.

The speaker said he set up a meeting last week with officials from the Department of Defense, the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI, and “the answers are not forthcoming.”

Drones in Fairfield, Connecticut

A social media user said she filmed several drones hovering over Fairfield, Connecticut, on Thursday, Dec. 12. (Lucy Biggers)

DRONES SPOTTED ACROSS NORTHEAST LIKELY COMING FROM ‘INSIDE THE US,’ MILITARY EXPERT SAYS

On Saturday, Biden administration officials hosted a call addressing concerns surrounding the recent drone sightings.

Representatives from the FBI, the FAA, the National Security Council, the DHS and the DoD attended the call. 

An FBI official said the agency has received 5,000 tips since the first mysterious drone was seen flying above New Jersey in November, but of those 5,000 tips, fewer than 100 warranted further investigation.

Photos taken in the Bay Shore section of Toms River of what appear to be large drones hovering in the area at high altitudes

Photos taken in the Bay Shore section of Toms River of what appear to be large drones hovering in the area at high altitudes in New Jersey on Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024. The drones seemed to be well above the 400 feet height FAA regulations allow. (Doug Hood/Asbury Park Press)

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The FBI official added that investigators have found no evidence of large-scale unmanned drone activity despite the recent uptick.

“We’re doing our best to find the origin of that specific … those drone activities,” the official said. “But I think there has been a slight overreaction.”

Fox News Digital’s Danielle Wallace and Audrey Conklin contributed to this report.

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