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JD Vance turns Turning Point speech into midterm battle cry — and a preview of 2028

JD Vance turns Turning Point speech into midterm battle cry — and a preview of 2028

Vice President JD Vance is amplifying his message for next year’s midterm elections, when Republicans will be defending their congressional majorities. Vance, speaking at a major conservative summit this weekend, pointed to the Democrats and predicted that Republicans “are gonna kick their ass next November.” The comment from the vice president on Sunday sparked immediate chants of “USA” from the crowd at the annual AmericaFest conference by Turning Point USA, the influential and politically powerful conservative group. 2028 POWER MOVE: TURNING POINT’S ERIKA KIRK THROWS SUPPORT BEHIND JD VANCE AS MAGA HEIR APPARENT The annual gathering was Turning Point’s first since co-founder and conservative champion Charlie Kirk was assassinated in September. Vance and Charlie Kirk were close friends, and the vice president, who credits Kirk with his political rise, appeared to blame “far left” Democrats and their agenda for his death. VANCE SAYS AMERICA FIRST MOVEMENT REJECTS ‘PURITY TESTS’ “If you miss Charlie Kirk, do you promise to fight what he died for? Do you promise to take the country back from the people who took his life?” Vance asked the crowd. While President Donald Trump remains the top draw, Vance is expected to play a large role on the campaign trail next year on behalf of fellow Republicans and his address at Turning Point, as well as his speech in battleground Pennsylvania a week ago on the issue of affordability, are likely to be an appetizer for things to come in 2026. “The VP will be playing a big role on the trail next year,” a source close to the vice president told Fox News Digital. But pointing to the president’s and vice president’s anything but stellar poll numbers, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) argued, “Here’s the reality J.D. Vance and Trump are unwilling to face: Americans give them record-low approval ratings for failed leadership that has led to massive layoffs, skyrocketing prices, and economic uncertainty.” CHARLIE KIRK ALLY WARNS GOP NOT TO TAKE GEN Z FOR GRANTED, CALLING FOR ‘SENSE OF URGENCY’ “Every stop on the White House’s midterm campaign tour reminds Americans of how Republicans have made life harder. One year into the Trump-Vance administration, their 2024 coalition is unraveling because they have betrayed their own voters to give tax breaks to billionaires,” DNC rapid response director Kendall Witmer emphasized in a statement to Fox News Digital. While Vance has yet to say anything publicly on whether he’ll launch a 2028 campaign to succeed the term-limited Trump, he is considered by many on the right to be the president’s heir apparent to eventually take over the MAGA mantle. And the conference, which drew tens of thousands of MAGA supporters, kicked off on Thursday with Charlie Kirk’s widow backing Vance in 2028. Ericka Kirk, who took over the reins of Turning Point after her husband’s murder, said, “We are going to get my husband’s friend JD Vance elected for 48 in the most resounding way possible,” in 2028. “Forty-eight” refers to the number of the next president. The backing of the vice president by Kirk and Turning Point, which is particularly influential among younger conservatives and whose political arm has built up a powerful grassroot outreach operation, could give Vance a major boost should he decide to run for president in the 2028 election.

Trump immigration agency flags 182 national security risks, issues record 196K notices to appear in 2025

Trump immigration agency flags 182 national security risks, issues record 196K notices to appear in 2025

FIRST ON FOX: The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) revealed new figures detailing the results of the Trump administration’s first year of cracking down on illegal immigration and removing criminal migrants from the country. The agency, which handles lawful immigration under the umbrella of Secretary Kristi Noem’s Department of Homeland Security, told Fox News Digital that since President Donald Trump’s inauguration, USCIS has referred more than 14,000 immigration cases to ICE for national security and fraud concerns, with 182 being confirmed or suspected to be national security risks.  USCIS also told Fox that the agency’s Fraud Detection and National Security Directorate (FDNS) completed 19,300 fraud cases and identified fraud in roughly 65% of reviewed cases. Additionally, FDNS completed more than 6,500 site visits and conducted 19,500 social media checks for potential immigrants’ online posts.  “USCIS has taken an ‘America First’ approach, restoring order, security, integrity, and accountability to America’s immigration system, ensuring that it serves the nation’s interests and protects and prioritizes Americans over foreign nationals,” USCIS Director Joseph B. Edlow told Fox News Digital in a statement. TRUMP ADMINISTRATION RESURRECTS ‘NEIGHBORHOOD CHECKS’ FOR CITIZENSHIP APPLICANTS LAST USED IN FIRST BUSH-ERA  Edlow’s agency issued a record-breaking 196,000 Notices to Appear (NTAs) to put migrants into removal proceedings. More than 2,400 arrests were made at USCIS field offices under the Trump administration’s watch. USCIS also noted steps taken to mitigate immigration concerns amid security threats. After an Afghan national was accused of killing a National Guard member, Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, and severely injured Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe during an attack in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 26, the agency froze asylum processing for all countries and launched a re-examination of every green card for high-risk nations. DHS TAKES VICTORY LAP AFTER ARRESTING OVER 10K ILLEGAL ALIENS IN DEEP BLUE CITY DESPITE VIOLENT RIOTS  In September, the top immigrant vetting wing of DHS strengthened the citizenship test, raising the total number of questions from 100 to 128, and increasing the number of questions on each individual test from 10 to 20. The qualifying passing score was changed from six correct answers to 12 correct answers. USCIS also matched the Department of Homeland Security hiring campaign to recruit more Americans to become immigration officers. In early November, Fox News Digital reported that more than 200,000 individuals had applied to be ICE officers, and USCIS told Fox more than 50,000 individuals have applied to become “homeland defenders,” previously titled immigration services officers. Homeland defenders are responsible for determining whether legal migrants are eligible for green cards, extended visas or citizenship. The agency’s actions are reflective of a campaign promise made by Trump to rein in what he called former President Joe Biden’s “flawed immigration policies” during his address to the nation last week. “In less than a year, President Trump has delivered some of the most historic and consequential achievements in presidential history—and this Administration is just getting started,” Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a statement over the weekend. “In record-time we have secured the border, taken the fight to cartels, and arrested thousands upon thousands of criminal illegal aliens,” Noem added. “Though 2025 was historic, we won’t rest until the job is done.”  

Vance unleashes profanity-laced two-word message for critics of his wife Usha

Vance unleashes profanity-laced two-word message for critics of his wife Usha

Vice President JD Vance is not mincing his words, telling the news outlet UnHerd during an interview that those who attack his wife Usha “can eat s—.”  He declared that “anyone who attacks my wife, whether their name is Jen Psaki or Nick Fuentes, can eat s—. That’s my official policy as vice president of the United States,” according to an interview transcript. Fuentes is a controversial podcaster widely described as a White nationalist with antisemitic views, while Psaki, a President Joe Biden-era White House press secretary, hosts a show on MS NOW. VICE PRESIDENT JD VANCE DECLARES MARRIAGE TO WIFE USHA ‘IS AS STRONG AS IT’S EVER BEEN’ Fox News Digital reached out to Fuentes on X and emailed MS Now to request a comment from Psaki. In a November 2024 post on X, Fuentes wrote, “Poo-sha Vance.”  He has also used an ethnic slur to refer to her. And earlier this year he wrote, “When conservatives attack Zohran Mamdani for being a foreigner, I just want them to keep the same energy with Vivek Ramaswamy and Usha Vance. Let’s be consistent.”   VANCE SAYS ‘AMERICA FIRST’ MOVEMENT REJECTS ‘PURITY TESTS,’ WELCOMES CRITICAL THINKERS New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, who was born in Uganda, is a naturalized U.S. citizen, while Usha Vance and Ohio gubernatorial candidate Vivek Ramaswamy were both born in the U.S. VANCE CALLS PSAKI COMMENTS ABOUT WIFE USHA ‘DISGRACEFUL’ UnHerd had asked Vance if he disavows Fuentes.  “My attitude towards anybody, again, who is calling for judging people based on their ethnic heritage, whether they’re Jewish or white or anything else, it’s disgusting,” Vance replied. “We shouldn’t be doing it.” “[That said,] I think that Nick Fuentes, his influence within Donald Trump’s administration, and within a whole host of institutions on the Right, is vastly overstated — and frankly, it’s overstated by people who want to avoid having a foreign-policy conversation about America’s relationship with Israel,” Vance continued. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Psaki made controversial comments about the second lady during an appearance on a podcast, saying she wonders what’s happening in Usha Vance’s mind, adding, “Are you OK? Please … blink four times … come over here … we’ll save you.”

Sanders blasted after blocking bipartisan kids’ cancer research bill: ‘Grinch,’ ‘selfish’

Sanders blasted after blocking bipartisan kids’ cancer research bill: ‘Grinch,’ ‘selfish’

A bipartisan bill to bolster research for kids’ cancer drugs was quietly killed on the Senate floor last week, the second year in a row the legislation was torpedoed. The Mikaela Naylon Give Kids a Chance Act was primed to pass through a fast-track process with near unanimous support in the Senate on Wednesday, save for one lawmaker who sought to amend the bill: Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. “What’s happened right here in front of us? The Grinch is stealing kids’ lives, and they’re stealing hope from the families, hope from the families that might have an opportunity just to try for a political agenda,” said Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., who brought the bill to the floor. SEN MURPHY WARNS ‘PEOPLE ARE GOING TO DIE’ AS CONGRESS PUNTS ON EXPIRING OBAMACARE SUBSIDIES “And I hope to God that every single family that’s going through this will hold the senator from Vermont accountable, and the state of Vermont will hold him accountable, too, because he’s playing with kids’ lives,” he continued. “He’s literally killing kids in front of us because of his political movement, and it is ridiculous.” Sanders’ move to block the bill was not a surprise. Several lawmakers who spoke in favor of the legislation urged him not to go through with the decision as pediatric cancer research advocates looked on from the viewing gallery. But doing so once again sets the bill back to square one as Congress enters a new year. The Vermont independent explained that he had no problem with the legislation, which would have incentivized the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and drug companies to encourage more relevant pediatric studies and invest in rare pediatric disease treatments, but he wanted to tack on an amendment to fund community health centers throughout the country. DEMOCRATS’ LAST-MINUTE MOVE TO BLOCK GOP FUNDING PLAN SENDS LAWMAKERS HOME EARLY “This is not a radical amendment,” Sanders said. “I’m not coming here saying, ‘Let’s do something we’ve not talked about.’ I’m not talking about passing Medicare for all here. I am talking about doing what the Republicans and Democrats agreed to a year ago but was torpedoed by some tweets from Elon Musk.” Lawmakers already had a version of the bill teed up for passage last year, attached to the colossal, year-end temporary funding extension produced by the House. But that package was ultimately blown apart by tech billionaire Elon Musk, who at the time was coming to Washington, D.C., to serve as President Donald Trump’s government waste attack dog at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). What eventually passed in late 2024 was a slimmed-down, three-month extension to government funding without the pediatric cancer research bill, and several other policy and funding riders eyed by both sides of the aisle. SENATE MULLS NEXT STEPS AFTER DUELING OBAMACARE FIXES GO UP IN FLAMES Lawmakers who spoke in support of Mullin’s bill argued that they supported Sanders’ desire to fund community health centers, but the underlying legislation was too important to let die on the vine again. Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chair Bill Cassidy, R-La., said he shared the concern for increased funding for health centers and committed to doing so when Congress returned, but that the “irony here is that the objection is going to come out of a genuine concern that people achieve healthcare.” “But there’s no one way to treat the ills, literally, the ills of the United States of America, and to think that we can do it all at once, it’s just not true,” Cassidy said. “But also to say that you’re not going to give a chance for children to have a cure for cancer if you don’t get what you want, it’s just not true. It is selfish. It is tragic.” And Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., shared Sanders’ concern, but noted that the GOP-controlled House had not committed to tackling the issue of community health center funding. “As disappointed as I am that the House isn’t ready to support increased funding for community health centers, I also believe that it is important to take action on this package now to help address pediatric cancer and lower prescription drug costs,” she said. “So I am disappointed that this bill will not move forward today.”

Comer summons Minnesota officials as House probes massive social services fraud

Comer summons Minnesota officials as House probes massive social services fraud

FIRST ON FOX: The House Oversight Committee is widening its probe into allegations of widespread fraud within Minnesota’s social services programs, which prosecutors suggested could be worth billions of dollars. Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., sent letters to seven current and former Minnesota state officials on Monday morning, inviting them for transcribed interviews with his panel. Comer sent two additional letters to Attorney General Pam Bondi and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, seeking the federal government’s cooperation in the probe and requesting briefings for committee staff by Jan. 9. LABOR SECRETARY ANNOUNCES ‘STRIKE TEAM’ GOING TO MINNESOTA TO INVESTIGATE RAMPANT FRAUD “The Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is investigating reports of widespread fraud in Minnesota’s social services programs. As the Director of Nutrition Program Services and in your previous roles as the Assistant Director of Nutrition Program Services and Supervisor of Business Operations and Support Services for the Minnesota Department of Education, you have information that will assist the Committee’s investigation,” read one such letter, sent to Emily Honer, the director of Nutrition Program Services at the Minnesota Department of Education. “Accordingly, we request your testimony at an in-person transcribed interview on January 26, 2026. If you do not voluntarily appear for the interview, we will be forced to evaluate the use of the compulsory process.” Another current official, Minnesota Department of Education Assistant Commissioner Daron Korte, was asked to appear on Jan. 28. Similar letters were sent to the following former officials with requests to appear on dates ranging from late January through early February: former Minnesota Department of Human Services Commissioner Jodi Harpstead, former Minnesota Department of Education Commissioner Mary Cathryn Ricker, former Minnesota Department of Human Services Chief Financial Officer David Greeman, former Minnesota Department of Human Services Commissioner Tony Lourey, and Eric Grumdahl, the department’s former assistant commissioner of Homelessness & Housing Supports. ILHAN OMAR DEFENDS MEALS ACT DESPITE TIES TO MASSIVE MINNESOTA FRAUD SCHEME “Whistleblowers have made it clear that American taxpayers were defrauded in Minnesota, raising serious questions about whether Governor Walz and Attorney General Ellison failed to act or were complicit in the theft,” Comer told Fox News Digital. “Today, the Committee is requesting information from the Treasury Department and the Department of Justice, as well as transcribed interviews with Minnesota state officials.” Federal prosecutors in Minnesota have charged multiple people with stealing more than $240 million from the Federal Child Nutrition Program through the Minnesota-based nonprofit Feeding Our Future. The probe has since widened to multiple state-run programs being investigated for potential fraud. Officials investigating are now questioning whether people at the very top of Minnesota’s government were aware of signs of fraud but did not act in any way to stop it. Gov. Tim Walz, who is running for a third term, took accountability in remarks to reporters on Friday: “This is on my watch. I am accountable for this. And more importantly, I am the one that will fix it.” He heaped doubt on federal prosecutors’ accusations that the fraud could have totaled in the billions, however. AGRICULTURE SECRETARY DEMANDS MINNESOTA FIX SNAP BENEFITS FOR 4 COUNTIES IMMEDIATELY UNDER PILOT PROGRAM “You should be equally outraged about $1 or whatever that number is, but they’re using that number, without the proof behind it,” Walz said. “But to extrapolate what that number is for sensationalism, or to make statements about it, it doesn’t really help us.” Walz also said he was “partners” with the federal government in stopping the fraud, and said he stopped payments to programs suspected of fraud in July after being granted the ability to do so. U.S. prosecutors held a press conference on Thursday announcing the fraud probe was widening to focus on 14 programs aimed at disbursing Medicaid funds. Attorney Joseph H. Thompson said those programs have cost roughly $18 billion since 2018, of which he said a “significant amount” likely fell prey to fraud. “It is staggering, industrial-scale fraud,” he said during the press conference. Thompson said some of those dollars have been traced to real estate investments in Nairobi, Kenya. He also said “some money went to Somalia indirectly” and “might have gotten into the hands” of militant group Al-Shabaab, but stated there was “no indication that the defendants that we’ve charged were radicalized or seeking to fund Al-Shabaab or other terrorist groups.” Fox News Digital reached out to Walz’s office, as well as the offices of Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, the Department of Human Services and the Department of Education for comment.

Lawsuit claims security cameras sold in the US carried undisclosed surveillance risks

Lawsuit claims security cameras sold in the US carried undisclosed surveillance risks

FIRST ON FOX: Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers is set to file a lawsuit Monday against Resideo, a smart home tech manufacturer, alleging the company misled consumers about the safety and privacy of its devices, Fox News Digital has learned. Resideo may not be a household name but its security cameras are widely available and could be quietly monitoring homes across the United States. The 33-page lawsuit, filed in Nebraska state court, alleges the company failed to disclose known security vulnerabilities and national-security risks associated with cameras made by the Chinese manufacturers Hikvision and Dahua. LAWSUIT CLAIMS BABY MONITORS MARKETED AS SAFE MAY BE FEEDING DATA TO BEIJING According to Hilgers, the cameras are linked to Chinese manufacturers that can be compelled under Chinese law to assist the country’s intelligence services. Meanwhile, Americans can purchase the cameras through ADI, Resideo’s global distribution network, which the company has marketed as a trusted security provider for homes, businesses, schools and hospitals. “Nebraskans install security cameras to protect their families, homes and businesses—not to invite hidden surveillance into the most private parts of their lives,” Hilgers told Fox News Digital. “Selling cameras with known security risks while marketing them as ‘secure’ is deceptive and dangerous. That kind of conduct will not be tolerated in Nebraska,” he added. CHINA TARGETS US MILITARY MEMBERS IN OVERSEAS SPY OPERATIONS, FORMER CIA CHIEF WARNS The complaint notes that Hikvision and Dahua appear on multiple U.S. government restriction lists, including under the National Defense Authorization Act and by the Federal Communications Commission, over national-security concerns, information the company does not disclose to consumers. In the lawsuit, Hilgers is asking a judge to require clearer warnings about the cameras, fine the company, refund customers who bought the products, and change how the cameras are advertised.   Hikvision and Dahua did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. Hilgers isn’t alone in sounding the alarm. Others in the security space say Resideo’s products represent a broader national threat. Michael Lucci, CEO of State Armor, said a win for Nebraska could send a message far beyond the state’s borders. “Companies that refuse to do the right thing for our country should pay the full price for any fraud they perpetuate on the American people,” Lucci said. “General Hilgers’ leadership should be replicated across all 50 states.” In a statement, Lucci added that “despite state and federal bans on dangerous Chinese Communist Party (CCP) surveillance technologies, some American companies relabel and continue to distribute cheap but dangerous Chinese tech to get around these bans.” “That is exactly what Resideo is doing at the expense of American manufacturers and our national security,” Lucci said. In September, Hilgers sued Lorex, a security camera maker that sells its products through retailers such as Costco and Best Buy, on similar allegations. The company marketed its cameras as “private by design” and safe for places like children’s bedrooms, while concealing that the devices rely on a Chinese firm sanctioned by the U.S. over national security and human rights violations.  Lawmakers from both parties have long raised concerns that the Chinese government exploits educational exchanges, research partnerships and business investments in the U.S. as cover for espionage activities. These warnings have intensified in recent years amid growing scrutiny of Beijing’s influence operations on U.S. soil.