Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

Claim Trump nixed top Musk ally from NASA post over Dem donations belied by ex-Dems on team

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Claims that President Donald Trump dropped his well-regarded NASA nominee over Democratic donations don’t hold up, given his track record of appointing officials from across the political spectrum.

Advertisement

«Trump Is Said to Have Known About NASA Nominee’s Donations Before Picking Him,» read the latest headline from the New York Times about the president’s decision to pull Jared Isaacman’s nomination – as the firestorm continues over the spacewalking billionaire’s close ally Elon Musk’s coinciding break with the president.

Trump had known about many of his circle’s Democratic ties before Isaacson came on the scene, including his own history.

Until the Obama administration, Trump reliably donated to Democrats, including Sen. Chuck Schumer, then-Rep. Anthony Weiner, Hillary Clinton – all of New York – Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada, and then-Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts.

Advertisement

YOU’RE HIRED, HERE’S WHO PASSED CONGRESS’ TRUMP CABINET TEST AND HOW STORMY THEIR HEARINGS WERE

RFK Jr., left, Donald Trump, right. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Since then, however, Trump has taken an adversarial tack toward Obama and Democrats associated with him, including Hillary Clinton – though he still reserves kind words for former President Bill Clinton.

Advertisement

While many of Trump’s cabinet picks are former congressional Republicans, like Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins of Georgia and Secretary of State Marco Rubio of Florida, many also hail from the left or are known to donate to leftist causes.

Health & Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is the most notable example, given his surname and namesake.

Kennedy, whose father was a New York senator, attorney general and a 1968 presidential candidate until his assassination, was a noted Democrat invested in environmentalism and other liberal causes.

Advertisement

His sister, Kerry, was first lady of New York during her marriage to Andrew Cuomo, while another sister, Kathleen, was lieutenant governor of Maryland under Gov. Parris Glendening – and his uncles, John and Edward, were two of the most famous Democrats in U.S. history.

GABBARD SPEAKS OUT AFTER LEAVING ‘WOKE’ DEMOCRATIC PARTY

Split of President Donald Trump and Jared Isaacman

Trump, left, Jared Isaacman, right. (Getty)

But Kennedy and his supporters forged a political bond with Trump and propelled him into the presidency, finding common ground on vaccine risk awareness, dangerous aspects of America’s food processing and transparency of government officials, particularly in the health care sector.

Advertisement

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was a Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii who later left her party after repeated barbs from its thought-leaders like Clinton – who accused her of being a Kremlin asset.

And Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent remains in office and has been widely praised by fiscal conservatives for his decisions so far, while also having a history of Democratic donations.

Bessent donated to Obama, Clinton and former Vice President Al Gore, and was also head of Soros Fund Management’s United Kingdom office in the early 1990s. The company, led by George Soros and his son Alex, is often considered the most powerful financial force on the far left.

Advertisement

Treasury Secretary Howard Lutnick – one of the lead negotiators of Trump’s tariff and trade agenda – was also a Democratic donor while head of the financial firm Cantor-Fitzgerald.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Lutnick’s donations have trended toward the GOP in recent years, and he has maintained a longtime friendship with Trump. On the Democratic side of the ledger, Lutnick historically supported the late Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, as well as Schumer and Clinton.

Advertisement

Lutnick has preferred pro-business and anti-regulation candidates and issues moreso than coming from a purely political point of view.

Isaacman, a New Jersey billionaire credited as the first private citizen to spacewalk, saw his May 31 nomination pulled this week after what Trump called «a thorough review of his prior associations,» which many, including in the media, believed referenced his history of Democratic donations.

Isaacman has donated to fellow Garden State-born astronaut Mark Kelly – now the senior Democratic senator in Arizona – as well as former Sen. Bob Casey, Jr., D-Pa., and a SuperPAC aligned with Schumer.

Advertisement

He also supported Rep. George Whitesides, D-Calif., a former NASA chief of staff and congressional freshman who upset a GOP-held swing district north of Los Angeles in 2024. 

Advertisement

INTERNACIONAL

Latina House Republican asks Supreme Court to block Dems’ bid to ‘racially gerrymander’ her out of Congress

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

New York City’s lone Republican lawmaker in the House of Representatives is asking the highest court in the land to stop a Democrat-backed bid to gerrymander her seat in Congress.

Advertisement

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., filed a petition with the Supreme Court late last week asking it to halt a state court-ordered redraw of New York’s congressional map ahead of the November midterm elections.

The New York State Supreme Court ruled last month that Malliotakis’ district unfairly dilutes the power of Black and Latino voters, following a lawsuit led by Democrat lawyer Marc Elias’ law firm on behalf of four New York residents.

New York’s 11th congressional district (NY-11), which Malliotakis won in 2020, encompasses all of Staten Island and a sliver of southern Brooklyn. It’s the only district in the Big Apple represented by a Republican after Malliotakis defeated one-term former Rep. Max Rose, D-N.Y.

Advertisement

BATTLEGROUND GOP LAWMAKER MOVES TO BLOCK WHAT HE CALLS DEMOCRATIC REDISTRICTING ‘POWER GRAB’

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis is petitioning the Supreme Court to stop New York Democrats’ push to redraw her congressional seat. ( Andrew Harnik/Getty; Drew Angerer/Getty)

Malliotakis’ court petition argued that the Manhattan court «violated the Equal Protection Clause by prohibiting New York from running congressional elections until the state racially gerrymanders» her district.

Advertisement

The GOP congresswoman pointed out in a recent interview with Fox News Digital that she herself is Latino, with a mother who fled Cuba’s communist regime.

«The fact that they’re claiming somehow Hispanics and minorities are disenfranchised when I’m the first Hispanic elected to represent the district makes it even more ridiculous,» Malliotakis said at the time.

DEMOCRATS SAY TRUMP REDISTRICTING PUSH BACKFIRING AS VIRGINIA ADVANCES NEW HOUSE MAPS

Advertisement

The state court decision by Justice Jeffrey Pearlman found that «Black, Latino, and Asian Staten Islanders’ political representation and participation in politics still lags behind White Staten Islanders» in violation of the New York State Constitution.

Hakeem Jeffries

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries speaks during a press conference on Capitol Hill on Nov. 3, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images)

«A demonstration of racially polarized voting shows that the minority groups at issue vote as a bloc, as do White voters, and that the minority preferred candidates ‘usually’ lose,» Pearlman’s decision said. «Petitioners have demonstrated that here.»

Malliotakis’ Supreme Court petition said, «The New York State Legislature adopted CD11’s current boundaries two years ago, with an overwhelming majority of the Legislature’s Black and Latino members voting in favor of it.»

Advertisement

It argued that the lawsuit was brought, however, «less than four months ago under the theory that the votes of CD11’s Black and Latino voters — who comprise about 23% of CD11 — have been unconstitutionally diluted because their candidate of choice wins only 25% of the time.»

The petition said the court’s decision to «racially gerrymander» the district is a «recipe for unconstitutional chaos, with no map in place and uncertainty as to whether nominating petitions can start circulating on February 24, with no end in sight.»

But Democrats have been salivating at the idea of drawing out the deep-blue city’s lone House Republican.

Advertisement

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said in a statement last month, «This ruling is the first step toward ensuring communities of interest remain intact from Staten Island to Lower Manhattan.»

New York is one of several states plunged into the redistricting battle that has gripped the United States.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement

It began last year in Texas, when the state’s GOP-led legislature redrew its congressional map to give Republicans an advantage of as many as five new House seats.

California soon followed suit, creating a new map giving Democrats the same advantage.

Advertisement

house of representatives politics,elections,politics,new york city

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Con la salida de José Jeri, Perú profundiza su inestabilidad política y tendrá nueve presidentes en una década

Published

on


Con la destitución de José Jeri, Perú profundizó un ciclo interminable de inestabilidad política que tendrá este miércoles un nuevo capítulo cuando el Congreso elija al octavo presidente en menos de una década.

Pero no será el último de este 2026. El 12 de abril los peruanos elegirán a su noveno mandatario de los últimos 10 años. Será por voto popular. El ganador de las elecciones asumirá el poder el 28 de julio.

Advertisement

Leé también: Nuevo golpe a Cuba: una importante minera suspenderá sus operaciones por la falta de combustible

Es un récord del que los peruanos no se enorgullecen. Si bien está lejos de los cinco presidentes en una semana que tuvo la Argentina a fines de 2001, Perú está inmerso en una interminable crisis institucional que convirtió a la sede de gobierno en arenas movedizas.

Una lista que se agranda cada año

Jeri fue el séptimo presidente del Perú desde 2016. Desde entonces la nómina se engrosa en medio de fuertes internas parlamentarias. Ninguno de ellos logró completar siquiera tres años de mandato. La lista es la siguiente:

Advertisement
  • Pedro Pablo Kuczynski. Gobernó entre el 28 de julio de 2016 y el 23 de marzo de 2018. Renunció en medio de una serie de escándalos que sacudieron su gestión. En diciembre, la fiscalía pidió ocho años de cárcel por corrupción.
  • Martín Vizcarra. Asumió en reemplazo de Kuczynski, del que era su vicepresidente. Estuvo en el cargo entre el 23 de marzo de 2018 y el 9 de noviembre de 2020. Fue destituido por “incapacidad moral permanente”. En 2025, fue sentenciado a 14 años de cárcel por haber cobrado sobornos cuando era gobernador de Moquegua.
  • Manuel Merino. Fue designado por el Congreso. Su gestión comenzó el 10 de noviembre de 2020 y culminó el 15 de noviembre de ese mismo año. Duró apenas cinco días. Renunció en medio de fuertes protestas.
  • Francisco Sagasti. También fue nombrado por el Parlamento. El mandato inició el 17 de noviembre de 2020 y se extendió hasta el 28 de julio de 2021. Completó su gestión.
  • Pedro Castillo. Asumió el 28 de julio de 2021 por el voto popular y fue destituido el 7 de diciembre de 2022 tras un fallido autogolpe. Tras su remoción se desataron protestas que dejaron decenas de muertos. Finalmente fue condenado a 11 años de prisión.
  • Dina Boluarte. La primera presidenta del Perú reemplazó al destituido mandatario de izquierda en su calidad de vice. Comenzó su mandato el 7 de diciembre de 2022 y fue removida del cargo el 10 de octubre de 2025 por “incapacidad moral”. Fue la mandataria que más estuvo en el poder en la última década. Le faltaba menos de un mes para completar tres años. Hoy enfrenta varias causas en la justicia.
  • José Jeri. Estuvo a cargo del ejecutivo desde el 10 de octubre de 2025 hasta el 17 de febrero de 2026. Fue removido por “tráfico de influencias”.

Francisco Sagasti, el único de los mandatarios que logró completar su mandato en la última década, responsabilizó a los distintos partidos con representación parlamentaria por las continuas crisis institucionales del país.

Es un Congreso irresponsable con personajes que no están a la altura de las circunstancias. Los ciudadanos tenemos una enorme responsabilidad de no volver a elegir a candidatos de los partidos que son responsables del desorden total que hemos vivido en los ultimos años”, dijo Sagasti a la emisora RPP.

Cuál es el origen de la crisis institucional que golpea a Perú

La analista peruana Upi Torrado, directora de la encuestadora Datum Perú, dijo a TN que el origen de las crisis que golpean cíclicamente al país se basa en la debilidad parlamentaria de los últimos presidentes.

“En los últimos tiempos el Congreso ha adquirido mucha fuerza frente a la debilidad de los gobiernos. Los distintos mandatarios asumen con bancadas muy pequeñas o no tienen bancada, como le ocurrió a Dina Boluarte”, indicó.

Advertisement

Personas protestan contra el presidente interino peruano José Jeri frente al lugar donde los legisladores debaten su posible destitución en Lima, Perú, el martes 17 de febrero de 2026. (Foto AP/Gerardo Marín)

Además, explicó: “Entonces se desarrolla una dinámica muy fuerte de poder. Asumen el gobierno partidos débiles con bancadas pequeñas. Al no tener ese respaldo legislativo, los presidentes son frágiles”.

En el caso de Jeri, su partido Somos Perú es minoritario. “Todos los partidos con representación parlamentaria están postulando candidatos a presidente y a la reelección legislativa. Jeri estaba envuelto en distintos escándalos y todos quisieron marcar distancia” en plena campaña, señaló Torrado.

Advertisement

Leé también: EE.UU. atacó a tres presuntas narcolanchas y 11 personas murieron en el Pacífico Oriental y el Caribe

En una reciente entrevista con TN, el expremier peruano Pedro Cateriano afirmó que la crisis comenzó cuando el Parlamento forzó la renuncia de Kuczynski en 2016 mediante “el mal uso de la vacancia por incapacidad moral”.

Según dijo, la vacancia presidencial solo puede ser fundamentada con acusaciones graves, como traición a la Patria, disolver el Congreso o impedir el desarrollo de las elecciones. Desde entonces se comenzó a usar el término “incapacidad moral” para remover a los presidentes por motivos diferentes. Se convirtió en un término elástico.

Advertisement

Además, en el caso de los presidentes encargados que asumieron tras la “vacancia” de su predecesor, el Congreso utiliza la “censura” que requiere de una mayoría simple porque en la práctica no se trata de un mandatario electo con el voto popular, sino de un titular del Congreso encargado del gobierno.

La “vacancia” propiamente dicha necesita 2/3 de los votos del Parlamento.

Perú, Jose Jeri

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Iconic ‘Lovers’ Arch’ on Italian coast collapses on Valentine’s Day

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A popular rock structure in Italy known as the «Lovers’ Arch» collapsed on Valentine’s Day following days of poor weather. 

Advertisement

The natural formation, which was part of the Sant’Andrea sea stacks along southern Italy’s Adriatic coast, was often used as a backdrop for tourist photos and wedding proposals, according to Reuters. 

«This is an unwanted Valentine’s Day gift,» Maurizio Cisternino, the mayor of the nearby town of Melendugno, was quoted as telling a local newspaper. 

Cisternino described the collapse as a «very hard blow» for the area after days of heavy rain, strong winds and rough seas. 

Advertisement

2 SKIERS KILLED IN AVALANCHE ON POPULAR MONT BLANC SKIING ROUTE NEAR FRENCH-SWISS BORDER

The «Lovers’ Arch» near Melendugno in southern Italy is shown at left in 2018. On Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026, the rock structure collapsed following days of bad weather. (DEA/V. Giannella; Paolo Manzo/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

«Nature has taken back what it created,» Cisternino said. 

Advertisement

Photos taken at the scene showed a pile of rubble in an area where the arch used to soar over the water.

RECORD-SETTING WAVE OF MOUNTAIN DEATHS ROCKS ITALY AFTER AVALANCHES STRIKE

People stand near where Lovers' Arch collapsed in Italy

The area where the «Lovers’ Arch» was located in Italy is a popular tourist photo site. (Paolo Manzo/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Officials are now warning that other parts of the rocky coastline are at risk of collapse, with cracks visible along the cliffs, Reuters reported.

Advertisement
Rubble seen in pile at site of Lovers' Arch collapse in Italy

The arch collapsed on Saturday, Feb. 14, following days of poor weather, a local mayor said. (Paolo Manzo/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

The news agency also said storms and heavy rains in recent days have damaged other parts of Italy’s coastline along the Ionian Sea, damaging beach structures and causing small cliff falls from Gallipoli to Ugento. 

Advertisement



italy,europe,europe,travel,weather,world

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Tendencias