Breaking News

Day: March 5, 2025

When secrets get exposed

The Constitution Study with Host Paul Engel – A whistleblower recently said they have evidence that the FBI used a pair of undercover female agents to “honey-pot” the Trump campaign in 2015. How’s that for a bombshell secret? What about the exposure of numerous members of the intelligence community holding pornographic conversations on an NSA communications system? Those may be bombshells, but there’s more…

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House Judiciary Finds Biden’s Temporary Protected Status Expansions Were ‘De Facto Mass Amnesty’

The House Judiciary Committee says in a report released Tuesday the Biden administration’s substantial expansion of Temporary Protected Status for immigrants, primarily from Venezuela and Haiti, was in fact “de facto amnesty.”
“What was intended by Congress to be a temporary status has become, over time, a permanent, automatically renewed designation, with some countries being designated for TPS for decades despite changed country conditions,” the committee said in a press release.

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Washington Mayor to Fired Federal Workers: We Are ‘Here to Support You’

Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser on Wednesday held a virtual town hall for federal workers who recently lost their jobs. Bowser hosted the town hall to discuss the impact of federal job losses on the National Capital Region and to share resources with D.C. residents such as unemployment insurance. A new public service career hub has […]

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Judge Blocks NYC’s Bid to Swiftly Recover $80.5 Million in FEMA Grant for Housing Illegal Immigrants

The money had been given to the city during the Biden administration to offset the overcrowding of facilities housing illegal immigrants.

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SSA Confirms Over $7.5 Billion in Retroactive Social Security Payments

Many beneficiaries are also set to receive higher benefits starting in April.

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$800 million in Social Security cost savings identified for 2025, SSA says…

The Social Security Administration (SSA) estimates that it is on course to save hundreds of millions of dollars in the 2025 fiscal year, with the bulk of the savings coming from payroll reductions.
“The agency has thus far identified over $800 million in cost savings or cost avoidance for fiscal year (FY) 2025 in areas of payroll, information technology, contracts and grants, and space savings (i.e., real property), and other savings through new, common-sense approaches to printing, travel, and purchase card policies,” SSA said in a March 3 statement .

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