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‘We did what we came here to do’: Trump releases farewell address but doesn’t mention Biden by name
Read full article: ‘We did what we came here to do’: Trump releases farewell address but doesn’t mention Biden by nameWASHINGTON – In his farewell address, President Donald Trump says he will pray for the success of the next administration. The White House released excerpts of the video address ahead of its release Tuesday afternoon, a day ahead of President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration. He said: “We did what we came here to do — and so much more.”Trump doesn’t mention Biden by nameTrump does not mention his successor, Biden, by name in his farewell address. Trump refers to the “next” and “new” administration in the nearly 20-minute speech taped in the White House Blue Room. Trump acknowledged in his farewell address that he will “hand power over to a new administration at noon on Wednesday” - when Trump’s term ends and Biden’s begins.
FBI vetting National Guard troops in DC amid fears of insider attack
Read full article: FBI vetting National Guard troops in DC amid fears of insider attackHe said Guard members are also getting training on how to identify potential insider threats. Multiple officials said the process began as the first Guard troops began deploying to D.C. more than a week ago. That could include involvement in prior investigations or terrorism-related concerns, said David Gomez, a former FBI national security supervisor in Seattle. Gen. Daniel R. Hokanson, chief of the National Guard Bureau, has been meeting with Guard troops as they arrive in D.C. and as they gather downtown. Behind them were dozens more National Guard officers and staff, with their eyes trained on additional maps and charts displayed on the wall.
$1.7M for George Strait, six-figure bonuses: Months later, a lawsuit forced Texas to release details on inaugural spending
Read full article: $1.7M for George Strait, six-figure bonuses: Months later, a lawsuit forced Texas to release details on inaugural spendingThe result is the most detailed and complete account of inaugural spending in decades. Few records document inaugural committee spending in the state, and those that exist are inconsistent about how expenditures are categorized year to year. Instead, the inaugural committee spent nearly twice that — 19% — on fundraising last year. Five days after that, a process server tried to deliver the lawsuit to Bugg, the chair of the inaugural committee. Aleshire said there’s no reason why the Texas Inaugural Committee should be walled off from scrutiny.