As Donald Trump presses on with his contentious plan to install Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence on 19 June, he has reiterated that he has asked Pulte “to execute the immediate and needed downsizing of the office, reverting staff to their home agencies”.
In a post on Truth Social moments ago (despite being due at a bill signing), the president added: “At the same time, I am looking for a permanent ODNI Nominee with experience in National Security.”
He went on: “I am asking Congress to send me a short-term extension of FISA to provide time for the selection and confirmation of a permanent Head of the Agency.”
Democratic lawmakers have said Pulte’s appointment would scuttle a bipartisan agreement to renew section 702 of Fisa (the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act), which is due to expire on Friday.
“The Radical Left Dumocrats are trying to take our National Security hostage because of unrelated issues,” Trump wrote.
Trump also claims that the agreement is “fully negotiated” and it’s a “meaningful paper” that Iran just needs to sign.
Asked if he is thinking of attacking Iranian power plants and bridges (see my earlier post here on Fox News’s report), Trump replies: “Well, I’m not going to say that to you, but I can do that.”
Trump has now gone straight to questions. Right off the bat, he’s asked what he meant when he said Iran “will have to pay the price” for taking too long to reach a deal.
The president responds:
Well, we’re going to be attacking them, attacking them very hard.
Asked if that means resuming bombing, Trump adds: “Yeah, well based on the helicopter, I assume we have the right to do that.”
He says Tehran should sign the deal and says “they keep tapping us along”, before the US army Apache helicopter went down near the strait of Hormuz.
Trump accused Iran of shooting down the aircraft, and the US military subsequently launched several hours of strikes on Iranian targets, including air defences and radar sites, near the Gulf. Iran responded with strikes targeting US bases in the region.
“So, we’ll see what happens. But we hit them hard yesterday, and we’re going to hit them hard again today,” Trump added. “And we’ll see what happens with the deal. We were really close to a deal but they keep tapping us along, they keep playing us for suckers.”
Trump claims that Iran has already agreed to not obtaining a nuclear weapon, but the agreement still needs to be signed. (A reminder that Iran had previously agreed to this under the 2015 deal signed with the Obama administration, which Trump tore up three years later.)
He then attacks the Iranian team and president as “very stupid”.
Trump went on for some time about his ongoing renovation of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool and said it will be completed by 4 July.
We sandblasted the surface, we fumigated it. We took out 11 dumpsters, big dumpsters full of garbage. It was all garbage. Some of the garbage was there for years. It was all disgusting. It smelled … We rinsed it out, and we gave it a beautiful surface and then we put a swimming pool topping, but industrial strength, industrial-strength tanks, lots of other things.
“Everybody’s looking at that reflecting pool,” he added. “We use the dark blue, it’s called American flag blue.”
He still hasn’t signed the bill, by the way. Stay with us.

And Trump has arrived at the signing.
He begins by crediting the House speaker, Mike Johnson, for “doing a fantastic job” for getting the bill through the House with such a slim majority.
He then goes on a very lengthy tangent about all the amazing swimming pools he’s built in his property career and all the fountains they’re restoring in DC. Hopefully we’ll get to the signing and questions soon.
As Donald Trump presses on with his contentious plan to install Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence on 19 June, he has reiterated that he has asked Pulte “to execute the immediate and needed downsizing of the office, reverting staff to their home agencies”.
In a post on Truth Social moments ago (despite being due at a bill signing), the president added: “At the same time, I am looking for a permanent ODNI Nominee with experience in National Security.”
He went on: “I am asking Congress to send me a short-term extension of FISA to provide time for the selection and confirmation of a permanent Head of the Agency.”
Democratic lawmakers have said Pulte’s appointment would scuttle a bipartisan agreement to renew section 702 of Fisa (the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act), which is due to expire on Friday.
“The Radical Left Dumocrats are trying to take our National Security hostage because of unrelated issues,” Trump wrote.
In his opening statement to the House oversight committee, which was shared on his website, Bill Gates said:
At the outset, I want to state very clearly: I never witnessed nor had any indication that Epstein was engaged in ongoing criminal conduct. I never went to his island, his ranch, or his Florida home. I have never victimized anyone. While he may have sought to foster a personal relationship, I was never interested in that and never reciprocated.
Gates said he was introduced to Epstein in 2011 “through people I trusted in my professional and philanthropic work”, and that he “claimed he could raise billions of dollars for global health”. But by 2014, he found this to be “a dead-end” and told Epstein their association would go no further.
Gates goes on to say that Epstein later tried to use knowledge of his extramarital affairs as leverage “to pressure me to re-engage with him”.
It was after this that I learned Epstein had become aware of sensitive information about my personal life, including the fact that I had been unfaithful in my marriage. These affairs had nothing to do with my interactions with Epstein, but they were painful for my family.
As the public can now see, based on what has been released in the files, Epstein was working to use information about my infidelities – in addition to many lies that he layered on top – to pressure me to re-engage with him. He was unsuccessful in this effort, but it shows some of the ways he tried to leverage his interactions with me to further his agenda.
Gates expressed regret at meeting with Epstein, calling it “a grave error of judgment”.
I recall being aware that Epstein had faced prior legal issues, but I did not fully understand the extent of the crimes he committed. I accepted the introduction without applying the scrutiny I should have.
I should never have met with Epstein in the first place. Based on what I know now, I understand that even if he had delivered the new donors he promised, it would not have justified associating with him.
As Chris notes, the bill’s passage yesterday was a victory for the House speaker, Mike Johnson, who is managing a historically slim Republican majority, and for Donald Trump, whose bid to create a nearly $1.8bn “anti-weaponization” fund that would pay out his allies almost derailed the legislation as it made its way through Congress.
Shortly before the act’s passage in the House, GOP lawmakers voted down an attempt by Democrats to insert language that would have blocked the government from issuing payouts to anyone convicted of assaulting a police officer during the January 6 insurrection. Andas the bill was being considered by the Senate last week, a small group of Republicansalso sought to find bipartisan compromise on an amendment that would bar the so-called “anti-weaponization” fund, without success.
The proposal nonetheless remains an issue for some congressional Republicans, even thoughthe acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, told a House committee last week that the proposal was dead in the water. In an interview broadcast on Sunday, the president again refused to rule out its creation.
The spending legislation was also delayed by uproar over a similarly politically toxic attempt to include $1bn for security improvements related to the ballroom Trump is building at the White House. Senate Republicans eventually agreed to remove those funds, after the chamber’s parliamentarian ruled it could not be included if the measure was to pass using the budget reconciliation procedure to circumvent the Democratic filibuster.
House Republicans’ approval of the bill yesterday, which will fund through the duration of his term the agencies leading Trump’s immigration crackdown, ended a months-long standoff with Democrats that at one point shuttered the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
The Secure America Act passed in a 214-212 vote that was largely along party lines, with Kevin Kiley, an independent who aligns with the Republicans, joining all Democrats in voting no.
The Senate approved the measurelast week, which allocates $38bn to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), $26bn to Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and $5bn more to the DHS through September 2029. The legislation now awaits Trump’s signature this morning.
The bill ends a blockade of funding for the agencies, which Democrats announced in January after federal agents killed two US citizens in Minneapolis amid an intensive campaign billed as rooting out undocumented immigrants. Their boycott – and fruitless effort to negotiate reforms to federal immigration enforcement operations – halted passage of a measure that authorized spending by the entirety of DHS, forcing it to shut down for 75 days from mid-February.
The department reopened at the end of April after Democrats agreed to support legislation that paid for all of its operations excluding ICE and CBP, while Republicans then moved to approve funding for those agencies through the duration of Trump’s presidency, saying it was necessary to prevent Democrats from shutting down DHS again.
House Democrats unanimously opposed the bill, with Hakeem Jeffries, the minority leader, saying it would “waste $70 billion in taxpayer money to give a blank check to ICE without any guardrails, any oversight, any accountability”.
Republicans countered by accusing Democrats of trying to “defund the police” and allow undocumented immigrants to enter the country.
Here’s Chris’s report from yesterday:
Donald Trump is due this morning to sign the Secure America Act – the GOP’s $70bn bill that will fund ICE and Border Patrol through 2029 – into law, after the House narrowly passed the bill yesterday.
There is a livestream here if you’d like to follow the signing. Trump often makes remarks and/or takes questions at these events, and I’ll bring you all the key lines here.
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هلدینگ کاسپین استانبول | خرید ملک در ترکیه | صرافی معتبر ایرانی در ترکیه | خرید و فروش طلا در ترکیه | مهاجرت به ترکیه | واردات و صادرات در ترکیه | نیازمندیهای ترکیه | اخبار ترکیه | اخبار جهانی | توریست ایران | خدمات توریستی در ایران | تورهای گردشگری ایران | هلدینگ اول | خدمات کاریابی و فریلنسری و شغل | مرجع اطلاعات ایران (همه چیز در ایران) | کیف پول و خدمات مالی و پرداخت یار | اخبار ایران | تابلو زنده قیمت ارز در ترکیه و استانبول | صرافی آنلاین ترکیه | قیمت طلا و نقره در ترکیه | سرمایه گذاری در ترکیه | جواهرات در ترکیه | نرخ لحظه ای ارزها در استانبول | قیمت دلار امروز در ترکیه | قیمت دلار استانبول امروز | قیمت لحظه ای دلار | اخبار روز ترکیه استانبول | اپلیکیشن ISTEX | اپلیکیشن قیمت لحظه ای دلار و یورو و لیر و ارزها در ترکیه
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