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The Dictatorship

Gaetz’s withdrawal proves political gravity still exists. Will it come for Trump’s other picks?

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Gaetz’s withdrawal proves political gravity still exists. Will it come for Trump’s other picks?

By Chris Hayes

This is an adapted excerpt from the Nov. 21 episode of “All In with Chris Hayes.”

On Thursday, Donald Trump failed the first big test of his second administration when Matt Gaetz withdrew from consideration for attorney general. Trump’s pick for the top job at the Justice Department made the announcement after reportedly learning that the House Ethics Committee had heard testimony from a woman who said she had a second sexual encounter with Gaetz when she was underage. (A witness to one of those encounters said she did not believe Gaetz knew the woman was a minor at the time.)

Trump decisively lost this first fight with his own party and, in doing so, he proved that political gravity still exists.

Gaetz was already investigated by the Justice Department for allegedly sex trafficking a 17-year-old girl, which he denies. (Authorities ultimately decided not to bring charges.) Gaetz has also been the subject of a multiyear investigation by the House Ethics Committee into accusations of sexual misconduct and illegal drug use, which he denies.

His confirmation was already looking like an uphill battle, with more than half of Senate Republicans saying that they did not expect Gaetz to get the necessary votes.

Trump wasted no time choosing his replacement. Hours later, he announced that he will nominate Pam Bondi, the former attorney general of Florida. Bondi is a longtime Trump ally, she represented the then-president during his first impeachment trial. She is also a Fox News regular, even co-hosting an afternoon program while she was still serving as Florida’s top lawyer.

We will have to wait and see how Trump’s second choice for attorney general fares, but let’s be clear: He decisively lost this first fight with his own party and, in doing so, he proved that political gravity still exists.

Trump may have won more votes in swing states and eked out a plurality nationallybut that did not suddenly make him into a brilliant strategist. And it did not convert the band of miscreants around him into popular and confirmable figures.

Choosing Gaetz for this job was a dumb move; it was an unforced error. He is manifestly unqualified and unconfirmable. But of course, he’s not alone. The president-elect has chosen a menagerie of figures for his Cabinet, many of whom also face very serious accusations.

There’s Pete Hegseth, who was accused of sexually assaulting a woman in 2017. He denies the allegation and says it was consensual. Police did not press charges against Hegseth, but he did admit to paying the woman a settlement. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is accused of sexually assaulting his 23-year-old babysitter. He has not exactly denied these allegations but has said that he is “not a church boy.” And there’s Linda McMahon, who was named in a child abuse lawsuit. The lawsuit alleges McMahon knew about a ringside announcer who allegedly abused young boys for years but did nothing about it. She has called that lawsuit “baseless.”

So if gravity does truly exist on planet Trump, those are the sorts of things that would sink any presidential nominee. In fact, a lot of people have gone down for far, far less.

The first major one of the modern era was Zoë Baird, President Bill Clinton’s first pick for attorney general in 1993. The week before Clinton’s inauguration, a front-page New York Times story broke the bombshell report that Baird had paid an undocumented nanny off the books.

Within a matter of days, “Nannygate,” as it came to be known, had blown up enough to destroy Baird’s nomination. Unfortunately for Clinton, his woes continued with his next nominee for the job, Judge Kimba Wood, who also had a nanny problem.However, unlike Baird, Wood had paid all the required taxes relating to the undocumented worker.

It’s undeniably good news that Gaetz will not be our next attorney general, but that does not relieve the pressure on Trump’s other picks.

Now, if you’re going to be attorney general of the United States, you should probably follow the law scrupulously. But these were obviously minor offenses, already resolved by paying back the relatively small amounts of money owed.

The trend continued, in a bipartisan fashion, into the George W. Bush administration. In 2001, Linda Chavez withdrew as Bush’s nominee for labor secretary over another controversy involving the employment of an undocumented immigrant. In 2004, former New York City Police Commissioner Bernie Kerik’s nomination to run the Department of Homeland Security fell apart after it was alleged he too employed an undocumented immigrant as a nanny. It was also reported that Kerik was alleged to have had multiple extramarital affairs and financial issues.

But perhaps the most nonsensical flops came at the beginning of Barack Obama’s presidency when Nancy Killefer, his pick for chief performance officer, lost the job over a less than $1,000 tax bill and when Tom Daschle, nominee for health and human services secretary, was bumped because of free car rides he got from a wealthy friend.

That all looks pretty quaint in comparison with people such as Hegseth, Kennedy and Gaetz.

Now, it’s undeniably good news that Gaetz will not be our next attorney general, but that outcome does not relieve the pressure on Trump’s other picks. Republicans in the Senate have made it clear that they aren’t willing to publicly humiliate themselves for Trump’s wildly unqualified and unpopular choices. That means the fight is far from over.

Allison Detzel contributed.

Chris Hayes

Chris Hayes hosts “All In with Chris Hayes”at 8 p.m. ET Monday through Friday on BLN. He is the editor-at-large at The Nation. A former fellow at Harvard University’s Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics, Hayes was a Bernard Schwartz Fellow at the New America Foundation. His latest book is”A Colony in a Nation” (W. W. Norton).

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The Dictatorship

Trump’s border czar says ‘small’ security force will remain in Minnesota after enforcement drawdown

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Trump’s border czar says ‘small’ security force will remain in Minnesota after enforcement drawdown

WASHINGTON (AP) — White House border czar Tom Homan said Sunday that more than 1,000 immigration agents have left Minnesota’s Twin Cities area and hundreds more will depart in the days ahead as part of the Trump administration’s drawdown of its immigration enforcement surge.

A “small” security force will stay for a short period to protect remaining immigration agents and will respond “when our agents are out and they get surrounded by agitators and things got out of control,” Homan told CBS’ “Face the Nation.” He did not define “small.”

He also said agents will keep investigating fraud allegations as well as the anti-immigration enforcement protest that disrupted a service at a church service.

“We already removed well over 1,000 people, and as of Monday, Tuesday, we’ll remove several hundred more,” Homan said. “We’ll get back to the original footprint.”

Thousands of officers were sent to the Minneapolis and St. Paul area for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s “Operation Metro Surge.” The Department of Homeland Security said it was its largest immigration enforcement operation ever and proved successful. But the crackdown came under increasing criticism as the situation grew more volatile and two U.S. citizens were killed.

People take part in an anti-ICE protest outside the Governors Residence in St. Paul, Minn., on Friday, Feb. 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy)

People take part in an anti-ICE protest outside the Governors Residence in St. Paul, Minn., on Friday, Feb. 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy)

Protests became common. A network of residents worked to help immigrants, warn of approaching agents or film immigration officers’ actions. The shooting deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal officers drew condemnation and raised questions over officers’ conduct, prompting changes to the operation.

Homan announced last week that 700 federal officers would leave Minnesota immediately, but that still left more than 2,000 in the state. He said Thursday that a “significant drawdown” was already underway and would continue through this week.

Homan said enforcement would not stop in the Twin Cities and that mass deportations will continue across the country. Officers leaving Minnesota will report back to their stations or be assigned elsewhere.

When asked if future deployments could match the scale of the Twin Cities operation, Homan said “it depends on the situation.”

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The Dictatorship

Rubio says ‘no reason’ to doubt Navalny was killed by dart frog poison

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ByDavid Rohde

Secretary of State Marco Rubio says there is “no reason” to doubt a new report by five European nations that Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was killed in a Russian government prison with poison found in Latin American dart frogs.

A fatal toxin not found naturally in Russia — epibatidine — was “conclusively” discovered in samples of Navalny’s body by a joint investigation conducted by Germany, France, Britain, the Netherlands and Sweden, according to a joint statement by the nations on Saturday.

The toxin is only known to exist in poison dart frogs in Central and South America. One species, the phantasmal poison frog, contains a chemical that is 200 times more potent than morphine.

“It’s a troubling report,” Rubio told reporters at a news conference during a visit to Slovakia on Sunday. “We don’t have any reason to question it.”

It was not clear why the United States did not participate in the investigation of Navalny’s death. But the finding comes amid rising support in the Senate for a bill that would impose sweeping new sanctions against the government of Vladimir Putin, which has been opposed by the Trump administration.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, noted on the closing day of the Munich Security Conference, where Rubio received a standing ovationthat 84 out of 100 senators have signed on to co-sponsor the bill authored by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

“I don’t understand the reluctance to go after Vladimir Putin and what Russia is doing in Ukraine,” Shaheen told a group of reporters. “The failure by the United States to act has extended this war.”

Russian officials have repeatedly denied playing any role in the death of Navalny two years ago in a government-run penal colony in the Arctic. They called the new European report “a Western propaganda hoax,” according to Russia’s state news agency.

The report comes as U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kusher, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, are expected to meet with both Russian and Iranian officials on Tuesday in Geneva. The goal of the Russia talks is to reach a peace settlement in Ukraine by a June deadline the administration has set. (Witkoff and Kushner are also set to join a second round of nuclear talks with Iranian officials in Geneva on the same day.)

Critics of Trump, who promised to end the war days after returning to office, say Russia has not been seriously negotiating and is simply playing for time so it can gain ground on the battlefield. Democrats have also expressed concerns over reports that Witkoff has been negotiating business deals during peace talks with Kirill Dmitriev, a former Wall Street banker who runs Russia’s sovereign wealth fund.

Last week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that Dmitriev pitched $12 trillion in bilateral  economic agreements with the U.S. It is unclear how such large deals could be achieved. The $12 trillion figure is about four times the size of Russia’s 2025 gross domestic product.

A European diplomat whose country has negotiated with Russia in the past told MS NOW that Moscow has repeatedly made such investment offers. But the business entities end up being largely Russian controlled. “They lure you in,” said the diplomat, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly.

Shaheen expressed skepticism as well.

“I’m concerned about all things Russian in this administration,” Shaheen said. “I’m not a conspiracy theorist. But I’m beginning to become one with respect to Putin and President Trump.”

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David Rohde

David Rohde is the senior national security reporter for MS NOW. Previously he was the senior executive editor for national security and law for NBC News.

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The Dictatorship

FBI links glove found near Nancy Guthrie’s home to suspect on video

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A glove with DNA found near 84-year-old missing Nancy Guthrie’s home appears to match those worn by a masked person caught on surveillance footage, the FBI said Sunday.

“The FBI received preliminary results yesterday on 2/14 and are awaiting further testing,” the bureau said in a statement. “This process typically takes 24 hours from when the FBI receives DNA.”

The FBI said investigators collected “approximately 16 gloves in various areas near” Guthrie’s house in Tucson, Arizonawhere she was last seen on Jan. 31. Most of those gloves were “searchers’s gloves that they discarded in various areas when they searched the vicinity” but the glove with the “DNA profile recovered is different and appears to match the gloves of the subject in the surveillance video,” the FBI said.

“What we have is a lead here. The glove retrieved would need to have the victim’s DNA or some other forensic material to tie it to the home,” a law-enforcement source familiar with the investigation cautioned. “It must be connected to the home and victim. That would make the glove actual evidence, at this point it’s a lead. A good lead.”

The FBI said said the glove was found in a field approximately two miles from Guthrie’s house. The glove resembles the one on the hand of a person who was captured on porch camera video footage at the home of NBC “Today Show” host Savannah Guthrie’s mother the night she went missing.

The agency said it is awaiting quality control and official confirmation before putting the individual’s profile into the bureau’s national database, which could take up to 24 hours.

The FBI has described the man captured in photographs and on video as approximately 5’9”-5’10” with an average build. In addition to gloves, he was also seen wearing a ski mask and a black, 25-liter “Ozark Trail Hiker Pack” backpack. The agency on Thursday increased its reward for any information leading to an arrest and conviction of anyone involved in Guthrie’s disappearance to $100,000.

Guthrie was reported missing by her family on Feb. 1. Sheriff’s deputies also found blood on the front porch that was later confirmed to belong to the network host’s mother. Guthrie’s children, including Savannah, have posted several videos pleading for their mother’s release, agreeing to pay any ransom demanded and asking for help from the public.

Alex Tabet, Marc Santia and Ken Dilanian contributed to this report.

Erum Salam is a breaking news reporter and producer for MS NOW. She previously was a breaking news reporter for The Guardian.

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