
Click the link below the picture
.
What We’re Covering Today
Bondi Hearing: Attorney General Pam Bondi refused to apologize to survivors of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who attended her testimony at a lengthy House Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday. Ms. Bondi faced anger from Democrats and at least one Republican, Thomas Massie, who criticized her handling of the release of files related to Mr. Epstein, including redaction errors that revealed the identities of victims.
Netanyahu Meeting: President Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel met for two and a half hours at the White House. Mr. Trump wrote on social media that “nothing definitive” was decided beyond a commitment to continue negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program, which Israel considers an existential threat.
Trump’s Tariffs: For a year, Republican leaders in the House have blocked challenges to Mr. Trump’s major trade strategy, tariffs, but dissent within the party has set up a vote to rescind the levies on Canada.
Bondi clashes with Judiciary Committee members over her handling of the Epstein files.
Attorney General Pam Bondi refused to apologize to survivors of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein who were seated in the House Judiciary Committee room on Wednesday, and instead demanded that Democrats apologize to President Trump.
Ms. Bondi, imitating Mr. Trump’s tactic of going on the attack when facing tough questions, offered few answers, no admissions of fault, and many expressions of fealty and admiration for a president who has exercised direct control over her department’s actions.
Bondi is facing a barrage of questions about the relationship between three senior Trump officials and Jeffrey Epstein. Representative Becca Balint, a Democrat from Vermont, asked Bondi if she planned to investigate Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick about his relationship with the sex offender. Bondi replied that he “had addressed this himself.”
When Balint mistakenly referred to Bondi as “secretary” at one point, Bondi cut in and said, “I am attorney general.” Balint shot back, “Excuse me, I couldn’t tell.”
At the House Judiciary Committee hearing, there was an intense exchange between Attorney General Pam Bondi and Thomas Massie, a Kentucky Republican, over the Justice Department’s inadvertent release of victims’ identities and the redactions of a purported co-conspirator’s identity. “Who is responsible?” asked Massie, who co-wrote the law requiring the department to release the Epstein files. “Who in your organization made this massive failure?” Bondi responded by calling Massie “a failed politician.”Bondi has accused the Democrats of “theatrics” in her appearance at a House Judiciary Committee hearing. But the attorney general has been, by far, the loudest voice in the room. She has insulted several Democrats and has been repeatedly, if gently, blocked by Jim Jordan, a Republican and the chairman of the committee, from shouting over her questioners.
An uncomfortable and dramatic moment. Under pressure from Pramila Jayapal, a Washington Democrat, Bondi refuses to apologize over her actions in the case to victims of Jeffrey Epstein who are in the hearing room. Bondi, who appeared caught off guard, pivoted to attack Jayapal for trying to drag her “into the gutter.”The Epstein case, once an obsessive focus of the right, has become a political weapon wielded by Democrats in attacking President Trump and his appointees in the Justice Department and F.B.I.
The meeting between President Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel at the White House ended at about 1:30 p.m. The leaders met for about two and a half hours.
Trump wrote on Truth Social that his meeting with Netanyahu produced no definitive agreement about how to approach Iran. “There was nothing definitive reached other than I insisted that negotiations with Iran continue to see whether or not a Deal can be consummated,” he wrote. “If it can, I let the Prime Minister know that will be a preference. If it cannot, we will just have to see what the outcome will be.”
Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel have been meeting in private for nearly an hour at the White House as they discuss Iran.
Trump meeting with Netanyahu yields “nothing definitive” on Iran.
President Trump said he told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel on Wednesday that he “insisted that negotiations with Iran continue” over a possible deal over the country’s nuclear program, as the Middle East remained on edge over American threats to attack.
Mr. Trump said in a post on social media that “nothing definitive” came out of his meeting with Mr. Netanyahu at the White House. He said he told the Israeli leader that he preferred a deal with Iran, but warned that without one, “we will just have to see what the outcome will be.”
The six lawmakers who participated in the November video have repeatedly said they were simply restating a fundamental principle of military law, a point Senator Mark Kelly reiterated once again on Wednesday.
“It’s pretty black and white. I mean, it’s on a plaque, you know, at West Point,” the senator said, referring to the Loyalty to the Constitution plaque at the military academy. “When the law and orders are in conflict, you follow the law. It’s something we’re all taught.”
Senator Elissa Slotkin of Michigan, who also participated in the illegal orders video in November, accused President Trump of weaponizing the Justice Department against his political enemies.
“This is an authoritarian playbook that many of us have watched play out abroad over and over and over again, except now we’re seeing it in the United States,” Slotkin said. She said the Trump administration was seeking to intimidate members of Congress to “get other people beyond us to think twice about speaking out.”
“This is straight from the authoritarian playbook,” said Senator Mark Kelly, Democrat of Arizona, in response to a failed attempt by the Trump administration to secure an indictment against him and five other Democratic lawmakers who posted a video warning active-duty service members that they are not obligated to follow illegal orders. He said members of the U.S. Congress have a “responsibility and obligation” to oversee the executive branch, and “criticize when necessary.”
“This is the master alarm flashing for our democracy,” Kelly said Wednesday at a news conference on Capitol Hill. “It is threatening the very foundation of our system, that we have a right to free speech, to lawfully speak out and protest our government without fear of retaliation.”
Senator Kelly said Republican leaders in Congress needed to speak out against the Trump administration’s attempt to criminally charge the six Democratic lawmakers who posted the illegal orders video, adding that Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican, “seems to be fully on board with us being thrown into jail.”
Democrats push for transparency on Venezuelan oil money under U.S. control.
Congressional Democrats are escalating their efforts to ensure more oversight of hundreds of millions of dollars in Venezuelan oil proceeds being controlled by the Trump administration in what they say is an unregulated and opaque arrangement susceptible to corruption.
Top Senate Democrats introduced legislation on Wednesday calling on the White House to submit to independent accounting of the funds and their uses after lawmakers unsuccessfully pressed Cabinet officials for justification for the administration’s approach. Democrats said their goal was to force the administration to close offshore accounts holding the money and instead use domestic financial institutions that would be subject to congressional oversight.
The House is set to vote on canceling Trump’s tariffs on Canada.
The House is set on Wednesday to consider a Democratic-written measure that would rescind tariffs President Trump imposed on Canada last year, taking a largely symbolic but politically consequential vote that Republicans have fought for a year to prevent.
The measure, sponsored by Representative Gregory W. Meeks of New York, the top Democrat on the Foreign Affairs Committee, offers the House its first opportunity to formally register support or opposition to Mr. Trump’s trade policy since he began deploying tariffs as an economic strategy upon his return to the White House.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has arrived at the White House to meet with President Trump, according to a senior administration official. The two men plan to discuss how their nations should approach Iran.
Kevin Hassett, the director of the White House National Economic Council, came to the defense of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who is under scrutiny for having closer ties to the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein than initially disclosed.
“Secretary Lutnick is one of my best friends in the whole wide world, so I am very comfortable working with him,” Hassett told reporters at the White House on Wednesday.
A day earlier, the commerce secretary acknowledged at a Senate hearing that he had traveled to Epstein’s island and had another encounter with him, years after claiming to have cut ties. The White House has stood by Lutnick.
Federal debt is projected to hit record levels, the Congressional Budget Office warns.
In the first year of his second term, President Trump has tried to radically reshape America’s economy. He has slashed taxes, raised tariffs to their highest levels in almost a century, unilaterally canceled federal spending, pushed down immigration and pressured the Federal Reserve to sharply lower interest rates.
When it comes to the overall federal budget, though, the effect of these dramatic changes has nearly been a wash. The country is still on track to borrow what economists consider an alarming amount of money in the coming years. But the situation, on paper at least, has gotten only somewhat worse, but not significantly, under Mr. Trump’s unorthodox policy mix.
Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the minority leader, said in a social media post that his party would not support a stopgap bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security, raising the threat of a shutdown of the agency when funding lapses this weekend.
Bipartisan talks have appeared deadlocked as Democrats push for new guardrails on federal immigration enforcement operations. Republicans have outright rejected many of the proposed restrictions.
A Border Patrol commander congratulated the agent who shot a Chicago woman.
Shortly after a Border Patrol agent shot a 30-year-old Chicago woman five times, Gregory Bovino, who was leading the federal government’s immigration raids across the city, reached out to offer his congratulations.
“In light of your excellent service in Chicago, you have much yet left to do!!” he wrote to the agent.
The Latest on the Trump Administration
Department of Homeland Security: The agency hired a social media manager from the Department of Labor for a key communications job, despite posts he made on Labor Department media accounts that raised internal alarms over possible white-nationalist messaging.
Deleted Post: Vice President JD Vance’s office deleted a social media post that broke with administration policy in acknowledging the Armenian genocide after he visited a memorial to the estimated 1.5 million Armenians killed over a century ago.
U.S. Troops in Nigeria: The Pentagon will send about 200 troops to help train Nigerians to fight militants, but they will not be involved in combat. U.S. forces have been assisting local soldiers with identifying potential terrorist targets.
Gordie Howe International Bridge: A Detroit billionaire lobbied the Trump administration hours before President Trump said he would block the opening of a bridge connecting Detroit to Canada, officials said. Here’s what to know about the project.
Georgia Ballot Inquiry: An unsealed search warrant affidavit shows that a criminal investigation into 2020 election results in Fulton County, Ga., was set off by a leading election denier in the Trump administration and relied heavily on claims about ballots that have been widely debunked.
Justice Department: Prosecutors failed to secure an indictment against six Democratic lawmakers who posted a video in the fall that reminded members of the military and intelligence community that they were obligated to refuse illegal orders, four people familiar with the matter said.
.

Attorney General Pam Bondi testifying at the Capitol on Wednesday. Credit…Eric Lee for The New York Times
.
.
Click the link below for the complete article:
https://www.nytimes.com
.
__________________________________________

All About Space/Getty Images





:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/cap_v_soc-64336f86820c4217be021540b233461c.jpg)




