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House conservatives rally behind push to impeach Judge Boasberg over role in Trump investigation

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The House Freedom Caucus is rallying behind one of its own members’ push to impeach U.S. District Judge James Boasberg.
Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, introduced an impeachment resolution against Boasberg last month for his role in Arctic Frost, a code name for ex-Special Counsel Jack Smith’s probe into President Donald Trump and the 2020 election.
Gill argued Boasberg acted in a partisan fashion when he signed off on subpoenas and gag orders related to the investigation, including subpoenas for phone records from several Republican legislators in Congress — the news of which was made public in documents released by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, this year.
But it’s not immediately clear whether the push to impeach Boasberg is strong enough to launch an actual pressure campaign on House GOP leaders.
FROM ‘LEGISLATIVE TERRORISTS’ TO CENTER OF TRUMP’S DC REVOLUTION: WHERE KEY CONSERVATIVE CAUCUS IS NOW
House Freedom Caucus members like Rep. Chip Roy, left, and Chairman Andy Harris, right, are supportive of the push to impeach U.S. District Judge James Boasberg, center. (Tom Brenner/Getty Images; Valerie Plesch/Bloomberg via Getty Images; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
«It absolutely should be done,» House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris, R-Md., told Fox News Digital last week. «I think this is levels above what we thought was going on. His bias is pretty clear, someone with that kind of bias cannot exist in the federal judiciary.»
But Harris signaled it would not be an issue the conservative group would pressure House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., on anytime soon.
«No, we have other issues as well. We’re concentrated right now on the fiscal issues,» Harris said when asked if he would bring the issue to House leaders. «But we have discussed that, and there is broad support to impeach the judge.»
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Still, his conservative caucus appears largely supportive.
«I think there’s considerable movement over here, particularly in light of, actually the genesis here, Arctic Frost … the massive concerns we have with what the judge is doing — just making up facts out of thin air and assumptions based on motives that have no basis,» House Freedom Caucus Policy Chairman Chip Roy, R-Texas, told Fox News Digital.
Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., who is also running for governor of South Carolina, told Fox News Digital, «I hope so,» when asked if this impeachment push would be stronger than the last.

Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, leaves a meeting of the House Republican Conference in the U.S. Capitol on June 4, 2025. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
«He’s so partisan. He’s one of the rogue judges that exist today,» Norman said. «There are consequences for what he did.»
Meanwhile, Rep. Eli Crane, R-Ariz., pointed out that he was one of the earliest supporters of impeaching judges who conservatives saw as casting overly partisan rulings in the Trump era.
«I think a lot of these judges have gone way out of bounds and violated their oaths. I’m in support of it, yeah,» he told Fox News Digital.
He was more cautious when asked if it would yield results. «I don’t tend to have confidence in anything around here until I see action taken. Talk is cheap,» Crane said.
BOASBERG’S ROLE IN ‘ARCTIC FROST’ PROBE SPARKS FURY FROM GOP SENATORS, DESPITE LOCAL RULES
Gill was one of several House Freedom Caucus members to introduce impeachment resolutions against Boasberg this past spring, when he issued an order temporarily blocking Trump’s deportation flights to El Salvador.
At the time, however, Johnson warned Republicans that impeachment was not the most practical way to curb «rogue judges» — pointing out that removal would require support in the Senate that simply was not there.
Instead, House GOP leaders rallied around a bill by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., subcommittee chair of the House Judiciary panel’s subcommittee on courts.
That legislation, aimed at limiting the power of district court judges to issue nationwide injunctions, passed the House in early April but was never taken up in the Senate.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., seen during a House hearing in 2025. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
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Issa himself cautioned against moving too quickly toward impeachment when asked by Fox News Digital last week.
«We have a number of rogue judges, and I think before we talk about impeachment, with so many people seeing wrongdoing, both the House and the Senate need to hold appropriate hearings and evaluate just what the proper definition of good behavior is and whether not just one, but multiple judges, may have clearly violated that,» Issa said. «I think that’s the right way to approach it.»
Issa said he was «looking at» holding a hearing on the matter when lawmakers returned to Capitol Hill after Thanksgiving.
Fox News Digital reached out to the U.S. Courts system, which declined to comment for this story.
house of representatives politics,judiciary,politics,republicans,donald trump
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Trump says Dems who told military to defy illegal orders committed ‘sedition at the highest level’

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President Donald Trump on Saturday purported that Democrats who urged the military to defy illegal orders engaged in «sedition at the highest level» and «should be in jail right now.»
This comes after one of the lawmakers who appeared in the video calling on troops to ignore unlawful orders, Michigan Sen. Elissa Slotkin, was targeted with a bomb threat just days after the clip and Trump’s subsequent statements suggesting the Democrats be executed.
In a Truth Social post on Saturday, Trump argued that the «traitors» who appeared in the video «should be in jail right now, not roaming the fake news networks trying to explain what they said was OK.»
«It wasn’t, and never will be!» he claimed. «It was sedition at the highest level, and sedition is a major crime. There can be no other interpretation of what they said!»
SEN. SLOTKIN’S HOME TARGETED WITH BOMB THREAT DAYS AFTER SHE TOLD TROOPS TO DEFY ‘ILLEGAL’ ORDERS
President Donald Trump purported that Democrats who urged the military to defy illegal orders engaged in «sedition at the highest level» and «should be in jail right now.» (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Trump initially responded to the video message by saying, «SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!» He also shared a post from another account that said, «Hang them George Washington would.»
The White House and the president himself later attempted to walk back his comments, saying he did not wish to execute the Democrat lawmakers.
In another post on Saturday, Trump alleged that «many great legal scholars» agree with his position that «the Democrat traitors that told the military to disobey my orders, as president, have committed a crime of serious proportion!»
Slotkin, who previously worked at the CIA and Defense Department, shared the video on Tuesday of herself and other Democrat lawmakers who formerly served in the military and intelligence community encouraging troops and members of the intelligence community to ignore illegal orders from officials.
«This administration is pitting our uniformed military and intelligence community professionals against American citizens,» the lawmakers said. «Like us, you all swore an oath to protect and defend this Constitution. Right now, the threats coming to our Constitution aren’t just coming from abroad but from right here at home. Our laws are clear. You can refuse illegal orders. You must refuse illegal orders. No one has to carry out orders that violate the law or our Constitution.»
SEN. JOHN FETTERMAN ACCUSES TRUMP OF ‘DANGEROUS RHETORIC’

Sen. Elissa Slotkin was targeted with a bomb threat just days after the video and President Donald Trump’s subsequent statements suggesting the lawmakers be executed. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Other lawmakers in the video included Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona and Reps. Chris Deluzio and Chrissy Houlahan of Pennsylvania, as well as Reps. Maggie Goodlander of New Hampshire and Jason Crow of Colorado.
Trump administration officials and other Republicans criticized the video, which affirms that refusing unlawful orders is a standard part of military protocol.
Slotkin’s office said on Friday that police responded to her Michigan home following a bomb threat, but that she was not home at the time.
U.S. Capitol Police told her that she would have security at all hours of the day.
«We’ve got law enforcement out in front of my house,» she told MS Now. «It changes things immediately. And leadership climate is set from the top. And if the president is saying you should be hanged, then we shouldn’t be surprised when folks on the ground are going to follow suit and say even worse.»

The lawmakers in the video have vowed not to back down despite the threats. (Paul Sancya – Pool/Getty Images)
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The lawmakers in the video have vowed not to back down despite the threats.
«What’s most telling is that the President considers it punishable by death for us to restate the law. Our servicemembers should know that we have their backs as they fulfill their oath to the Constitution and obligation to follow only lawful orders. It is not only the right thing to do, but also our duty,» they said in a joint statement on Thursday.
«In these moments, fear is contagious, but so is courage. We will continue to lead and will not be intimidated,» the statement added.
donald trump,politics,military,democratic party,democrats senate,constitution
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¿Es malo hacer ejercicio antes de dormir?: esto responden los expertos

En los últimos años, varios estudios de gran escala han concluido que el ejercicio nocturno probablemente no interfiere con el sueño, mientras que otros siguen encontrando una relación negativa en ciertos contextos.
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Consultamos a expertos en sueño y ejercicio para que explicaran qué dice la evidencia sobre entrenar por la noche y cómo eso puede afectar el descanso, y para que compartieran las mejores prácticas para que una rutina antes de dormir funcione a tu favor.
Un ejercicio de intensidad moderada suele ser adecuado
Las investigaciones han demostrado de forma consistente que las rutinas de intensidad baja o moderada antes de dormir no perjudican el sueño, e incluso pueden favorecer un sueño más profundo.
Salir por la noche a caminar, un trote ligero o un paseo tranquilo en bicicleta –o realizar cualquier actividad que no eleve demasiado la frecuencia cardíaca– puede ayudar a reducir el estrés y liberar hormonas que generen bienestar, explicó Christopher Tanayan, cardiólogo deportivo de Northwell Health, en Nueva York. Agregó que el yoga y los estiramientos también pueden fomentar la atención plena, lo que prepara al cuerpo para el descanso.
Sin embargo, incluso algo bueno puede ser demasiado: algunas evidencias sugieren que realizar un entrenamiento de intensidad moderada extremadamente largo –por ejemplo, una carrera de tres horas– por la noche puede dificultar conciliar el sueño y afectar negativamente su calidad, dijo Josh Leota, investigador del sueño y autor principal de un estudio de 2025 que exploró la relación entre la actividad intensa en la noche y los hábitos de sueño.
Para el ejercicio de alta intensidad, la hora sí importa
Para los entrenamientos extenuantes, la evidencia es más contradictoria. Algunos estudios han encontrado que realizar una rutina de alta intensidad poco antes de acostarse tiene pocos efectos negativos sobre el sueño, pero otros sugieren que puede dificultar conciliarlo y mantenerlo.
Muchos expertos creen que los posibles efectos negativos se deben a los cambios fisiológicos que ocurren durante y después del esfuerzo prolongado. En particular, el ejercicio vigoroso eleva la temperatura corporal central, a menudo durante varias horas después de terminar la sesión. Además, el estrés físico activa el sistema nervioso simpático –conocido como la respuesta de “lucha o huida”–, que libera hormonas del estrés, explicó Tanayan.
El ejercicio nocturno intenso a veces dificulta el descanso (Foto: Ilustrativa/Adobe Stock)
Ambas respuestas pueden interferir con el ciclo del sueño. “Si tu temperatura corporal central permanece elevada, eso de hecho le dice a tu cuerpo que aún no es hora de dormir”, agregó. Aunque esto es especialmente cierto en los entrenamientos aeróbicos intensos, también puede pasar con el levantamiento de pesas o con cualquier rutina que someta al cuerpo a un esfuerzo continuo.
“Si el ejercicio es demasiado extenuante, aunque produzca beneficios psicológicos realmente positivos”, puede dejar tu cuerpo en un estado de exaltación que no favorece el sueño, dijo Leota, y agregó: “Es un equilibrio delicado”.
Pero la hora en que se realizan los entrenamientos nocturnos de alta intensidad puede marcar una gran diferencia. Si te gusta ejercitarte con intensidad por la noche y tienes cierta flexibilidad de horarios, procura ir al gimnasio al menos tres horas antes de acostarte, dijo Leota. Ese margen le dará al cuerpo el tiempo necesario para volver a su estado de reposo, señalaron los expertos.
Tal vez tengas que experimentar para encontrar la rutina nocturna que mejor te funcione
Si solo puedes hacer ejercicio por la noche, es mejor entrenar a esa hora que no hacerlo en absoluto, señalaron los expertos. También recordaron que la fisiología y la respuesta al ejercicio nocturno varían ligeramente en cada persona.
Averiguar qué es lo mejor para ti puede requerir algo de ensayo y error, dijo Michael Gradisar, psicólogo clínico y coautor de un estudio de 2021 sobre la actividad física nocturna y el sueño. No te limites a probar una sola vez un determinado régimen de ejercicio nocturno antes de decidir si te funciona, añadió, sino que “repítela una y otra vez”, prestando atención a cómo te sientes durante el día y a lo largo de la semana siguiente.
Si prefieres realizar entrenamientos intensos por la noche, la rutina adecuada podría implicar incluso elegir una o dos noches a la semana en las que duermas un poco menos para poder incluir ese ejercicio de alta intensidad, señaló Matthew Badgett, especialista en medicina del estilo de vida e integral en la Clínica Cleveland.
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En algunas personas, las decisiones que toman en torno a sus entrenamientos –como el lugar donde hacen ejercicio o la forma en que se alimentan antes y después– son las que interfieren con su descanso, explicó Jingyi Qian, investigadora del sueño en Mass General Brigham.
Sea cual sea el tipo o la intensidad del ejercicio que elijas, evita entrenar en un espacio muy iluminado cerca de la hora de dormir, ya que esto puede retrasar tu reloj interno del sueño, explicó Qian. También recomendó evitar las bebidas deportivas con cafeína y las comidas tardías, ya que ambas pueden afectar negativamente el sueño.
“Lo más importante es que no te desanimes a hacer ejercicio si solo puedes hacerlo por la noche”, dijo Qian. “Con un poco de autodiagnóstico y buenos hábitos de sueño, puedes encontrar una rutina que favorezca tanto la forma física como el sueño”.
The New York Times
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