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'The View' co-host lauds Hunter Biden as 'riveting' after podcast sit-down, calls him 'biggest troll'
"The View" co-host Ana Navarro praised Hunter Biden as "riveting" and "the biggest troll" Thursday on the ABC show's "Behind the Table" podcast while previewing their 90-minute interview and arguing that scrutiny of his Burisma income paled beside the Trump family's earnings during President Donald Trump's second term.
"The monetization of the presidency, the fact that Hunter got dragged through the coals and brought into a congressional hearing by Republicans for the money that he was making in Burisma, which is not even chump change in comparison to the billions of dollars that the Trump family has made off the presidency," Navarro said.
Navarro called the comparison one of several "double standards" discussed during an interview for her "Bleep! with Ana Navarro" podcast.
"I wanted him on because I’ve been seeing his social media and he has become the biggest troll, but he does it also with humor," Navarro said.
EYEBROW-RAISING CLAIM FROM ‘HUNTER BIDEN’ X ACCOUNT DRAWS GOP MOCKERY
Navarro cited Biden's response to a user who blamed him for cocaine discovered at the White House in July 2023.
"And he’s like, ‘No, I would have never forgotten my coke,’" Navarro said.
The Secret Service closed its investigation without identifying a suspect, though the FBI reopened the case in 2025. Fox News Digital reached out to the FBI and the White House for comment, but did not immediately receive a response.
Navarro described the lengthy conversation as compelling from start to finish.
HUNTER BIDEN RESURFACES IN LA, REACTS TO QUESTIONS ABOUT BIDEN TAPES, UFO FILES
"Hunter Biden is riveting, riveting. We talked for over an hour and a half," Navarro said. "Here’s the problem: The interview was scheduled at the same exact time as the Argentina versus England [World Cup] game."
Burisma paid Biden and business associate Devon Archer $1 million each annually after they joined its board in 2014, according to the House Oversight Committee. He joined when his father, then-Vice President Joe Biden, helped lead U.S. policy toward Ukraine during the Obama administration.
Hunter Biden sat for a closed-door House deposition in February 2024 during the Republican-led impeachment inquiry into his father. The full House never voted on articles of impeachment.
Navarro also defended Hunter Biden's art sales and maintained that the transactions received scrutiny.
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"And while his father was president, he didn’t make any money. He made money off his paintings… every painting he sold had to go through vetting, and he had been painting his entire life," Navarro said.
The White House rejected Navarro’s comparison, arguing Trump’s children built successful businesses independently while dismissing Hunter Biden’s credibility.
"President Trump’s children are extremely successful business leaders in their own right running multi-billion-dollar corporations. Hunter Biden smoked crack, banged hookers, and sold ugly paintings for hundreds of thousands of dollars. No one cares what he has to say," White House communications director Steven Cheung told Fox News Digital.
Biden's former gallerist, Georges Bergès, testified that a buyer-anonymity agreement did not take effect until September 2021 and that Biden knew about 70% of his buyers, Fox News Digital reported. Ten buyers paid $1.5 million for his artwork, of which Biden received $900,000, according to the Washington Post.
Reuters estimated in June that Trump and his sons had added at least $2.3 billion to the family fortune through their main cryptocurrency ventures since he returned to the White House. Trump said this month that he did not manage his personal finances.
ESPN writer who blamed racism for his arrest says racism is not to blame for Caitlin Clark hate
ESPN writer Howard Bryant wants you to believe the hostility toward Caitlin Clark in the WNBA has nothing to do with race and everything to do with her sticking her tongue out on the court.
Bryant presented his argument during an appearance on "The Right Time With Bomani Jones" podcast.
"I argue that this is not a racial question," Bryant responded to a question about whether players are targeting Clark. "I think people don't like her. … It's almost like a bit of hocus-pocus, right? She's a popular player but not a particularly likable player because of her on-court behavior, right? Like, how are you gonna go out there and make a whole bunch of threes and stick your tongue out and get up in people's faces and then cry about every trip down court?
He continued: "You're either in it, or you're not in it, right? I mean, can you have it both ways? Can you look and scream at the ref, 'That's a foul,' every time you have the ball? Right? And then when you make a shot, (you're) mean-mugging in somebody's face and not handle it. Are you tough or are you not tough? Which one is it?"
There you have it. According to Bryant, players are driving their fists into Clark's throat and poking her in the eyes because she complains to the officials.
Bryant's defense of the players targeting Clark is obviously not valid. As OutKick explained earlier this week, the media has ingrained in many players the idea that Clark's popularity is primarily the product of her being a straight White woman in a league that is roughly 70% Black or LGBTQ+. There are many, many examples of this. Naturally, that narrative has led many of the league's self-styled victims to resent her.
But there's more to it.
The league's race bullies have shown they will embrace certain White players — such as Cameron Brink and Paige Bueckers — because they have used their platforms to speak the language of the racial and sexual activism expected of them. Just last week, Bueckers called for more WNBA teams to hire Black women as head coaches.
Clark doesn't do that. She mostly sticks to basketball, creating the perception among critics that her silence somehow enables her supposedly racist fans, a point WNBA player DiJonai Carrington tried to make last season.
"Silence is privilege," Carrington said about Clark's focus on basketball rather than the purported social issues surrounding the league.
It's all transparent, though contradictory to the preferred narrative.
Then again, we can't expect honest analysis from someone like Howard Bryant. Two years ago, he published a column on ESPN.com on the Fourth of July titled "Baseball, Barbecue and Losing Freedom This Fourth of July." In it, he urged Americans not to celebrate their freedoms because of Jan. 6.
Per Bryant:
"YOU WATCH TV, even though you swore to not pay attention to the Jan. 6 congressional hearings. It was not a decision made from the perch of elegant privilege, of too rich to care, but from a full dissidence -- a weariness of the gaslighting and false equivalencies, the whataboutisms, the goalposts moving that have defined the past several years. The spectacle of all-white juries acquitting proud, admittedly guilty white killers of Black people largely predated your birth, and thus for the past 18 months you've held on to a truth: The events of Jan. 6, where Americans stormed the most symbolically important legislative building in the free world -- and a sitting president reportedly enraged he was not taken to the Capitol to join them -- are the most unforgivable betrayals of the American ideal in your lifetime."
SOPHIE CUNNINGHAM IS THE OPPOSITE OF MOST WNBA PLAYERS. AND THAT'S WHY SHE IS A MEGASTAR
Why a column like that ever appeared on a sports website remains an open question.
Speaking of self-described victims of racism, Bryant has portrayed himself as one for nearly a decade. In 2011, he was arrested on charges of allegedly assaulting his wife in front of their 6-year-old son. According to MassLive, Bryant was also charged with assaulting a police officer after officers arrived and allegedly observed him choking his wife in public.
Afterward, his defense blamed — you guessed it — racism.
"If Howard Bryant was Caucasian and was on the streets having exactly the same conversation with his wife — nobody would have even noticed," his lawyer, Buz Eisenberg, told the Boston Herald.
"Race still plays a part in our society and we intend to contest these allegations completely," Eisenberg added. "The 6-year-old had to witness his father being thrown on a hood of a car and being abused."
State Police spokesman David Procopio rejected that explanation, saying the arrest had nothing to do with race.
"Howard Bryant was arrested, first and foremost, because evidence indicates he physically assaulted a woman," Procopio said. "He had additional charges filed against him because he was combative with arresting officers."
Put simply, being arrested after allegedly assaulting your spouse and then fighting with police is not evidence of racism.
But that's who Howard Bryant is. Bomani Jones wouldn't have him on his podcast if he were any different.
So it's no surprise to see Bryant rush to defend the Black women who are so clearly targeting Caitlin Clark by claiming Clark deserves the vitriol because she sticks her tongue out and complains about calls.
By the way, that sounds a bit like a player by the name of Michael Jordan. Jordan routinely taunted opponents by, well, sticking out his tongue, trash-talking relentlessly, screaming at officials, and celebrating in defenders' faces.
Howard Bryant has written extensively about Jordan over the years. Curiously, Bryant never argued that Jordan deserved to be punched in the throat because of it.
Why is that?
WATCH: Inside look at the dangerous cartel human smuggling tunnels still being used at border
Despite President Donald Trump’s tight clamp on the border, cartels are continuing to attempt to smuggle humans and narcotics by going underground using a vast network of storm drain tunnels in El Paso.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s (CBP) elite Confined Space Entry Team gave Fox News an exclusive look inside the narrow tunnels, which stretch for miles across the region.
There are 32 entry points into the tunnels from the Rio Grande and hundreds of exit points throughout the city. The team said this makes patrolling the tunnels a game of "whack-a-mole" because smugglers can pop out of storm drains at any point. According to CBP, it is much more difficult for Border Patrol agents to detect and intercept smugglers using these secret routes. Nevertheless, they use technology to detect movement underground, monitor entry points and strategically position teams to intercept groups.
The greatest challenge, a team member told Fox News, is the heat and the time spent in the tunnels’ thick, low-oxygen air. He said that often by the time they encounter a cartel smuggler, "you’re already exhausted, and now, you have to potentially fight with someone underground."
"You can’t call for backup; you can’t call for help. It’s just you and your team versus everybody else," he said.
Team members said that the number of migrants being smuggled through the tunnels has dropped dramatically under Trump. Whereas there would regularly be groups of 40 to 60 people moving through the tunnels, agents now typically encounter two or three at a time.
Still, the smugglers have not stopped entirely. Reports indicate that cartels have significantly increased their fees for would-be illegal immigrants to take the tunnel routes, with migrants paying $20,000 to $30,000 per person to be guided through the underground routes.
MEXICAN NATIONAL SENTENCED IN BORDER CHILD SMUGGLING CASE INVOLVING THC-LACED CANDY
CBP also said that smugglers are increasingly using social media to recruit and train guides to navigate the hazardous passageways. The conditions underground are perilous, with poor air quality and intense heat, and El Paso daytime summer temperatures often exceed 100 degrees.
To prepare for this mission, the elite CBP team undergoes specialized training to operate underground, monitor oxygen levels and navigate the tunnels.
Fox News got this exclusive look as the Department of Homeland Security announced this week that June marked 14 consecutive months of zero releases at the border, continuing what it touted as an "unprecedented trend of historically low border crossings."
TRUMP REVERSES DHS POLICY, ORDERS ICE TO RESUME VEHICLE STOPS AFTER ONE-DAY PAUSE
Daily apprehensions at the border are down 94 percent from what they were during the Biden administration, according to DHS.
Meanwhile, CBP has broken staffing records this spring, the agency announced, reaching 21,471 agents — the most in the agency’s 102-year history.
Fox News Digital's Leo Briceno contributed to this report.
NFL suspends Arizona Cardinals executive for violating gambling policy, leaking draft info
An Arizona Cardinals personnel executive has been suspended indefinitely for violating the league's gambling policy.
On Friday, it was announced that Ryan Gold, the Cardinals' director of college scouting, had been suspended.
According to the Associated Press, the league said that after an investigation, it was determined that he had given out confidential, non-public inside information about Cardinals draft picks in the 2026 NFL Draft before they were made, though they did not mention who he gave this information to.
Furthermore, the league found that Gold also made parlay bets on NFL and college games.
In a statement, the NFL reiterated its gambling policy and stated that the integrity of NFL games was not impacted by their findings.
"The Gambling Policy, which is annually reviewed with all NFL personnel, strictly prohibits anyone in the NFL from participating in or facilitating any form of sports gambling, and from providing third parties non-public information," the statement reads. "Although there is no reason to believe the integrity of any NFL game was affected, the League takes any violation of the Gambling Policy with the utmost seriousness."
The Cardinals organization also released a statement and confirmed that only one employee was implicated in the investigation.
"The NFL’s policies and expectations for all employees are clear, comprehensive, and consistently communicated. We fully support the league’s decision in this matter, which involves a single employee. Our focus remains on preparing for the start of training camp next week and the 2026 season."
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According to the team's website, Gold has been with the team for 13 seasons. Before being promoted to director of college scouting in June 2025, he spent three seasons as assistant director of college scouting and four as college scouting coordinator.
As director of college scouting, the team described Gold's role as overseeing "the day-to-day operation and organization of the Cardinals' college scouting department."
It also noted that he is responsible for "the evaluations of draft-eligible prospects, managing the college scouting staff and coordinating pre-draft events."
Paul Pelosi charged with misdemeanor hit-and-run in Napa Valley
Paul Pelosi, the husband of former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., was formally charged with a misdemeanor hit-and-run Friday following an incident earlier this month, according to authorities.
The Napa County District Attorney's Office announced the filing Friday, charging Pelosi, 86, with misdemeanor hit-and-run and an infraction for unsafe turning movement stemming from a July 3 incident.
According to the criminal complaint, Pelosi allegedly damaged a parked Tesla before leaving the scene without attempting to identify the vehicle's owner or leave the information required under California law.
Deputies later located Pelosi roughly a half-mile away, where he allegedly told officers he had intended to return to the scene.
The complaint alleges Pelosi made an unsafe turning movement before colliding with the parked vehicle, resulting in property damage.
Prosecutors contend those actions formed the basis for both the misdemeanor charge and the accompanying traffic infraction.
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The Napa County District Attorney's Office included a copy of the criminal complaint with its announcement of the charges.
This is a developing story; check back later for updates.
Fox News Digital's Brittany Miller contributed to this reporting.
Poor air quality due to wildfires forces logisitcal changes at several MLB games, including postponement
Wildfires in Canada have had an adverse affect in the Midwest and Northeast, thus affecting some sporting contests.
On Thursday, a Major League Soccer game was postponed, while an MLB game in Philadelphia had to be moved up an hour due to concerns.
With the unofficial second half of the Major League Baseball season underway on Friday, five games were slated to be played in affected areas, with several making some logistical changes.
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Here are the updates from the games.
The Yankees postponed a game in 2023 due to poor air quality, although at that time, it was more than double the 150-ish range it has been this week.
The quality in New York improved throughout the day, and the game is slated to be played.
Of course, the Blue Jays play in the country where the wildfires have originated, prompting concern. The city had hazardous levels on Thursday night but reached "low health risk" by Friday afternoon. However, nearby cities in Ontario still had high health risk levels in the afternoon.
Thankfully, the Blue Jays play under a retractable roof at Rogers Centre, and the team announced shortly after 1 p.m. ET that the roof would be closed due to the air quality.
The Blue Jays say that if a game begins with the roof closed, "it may still be opened before the end of the sixth inning if the Umpire Crew Chief and MLB officials agree the weather has turned in a way that will ensure fan comfort and enjoyment." Typically, the roof can change its status only once per game.
FIFA, WHITE HOUSE MONITORING IMPACT OF CANADA WILDFIRES AHEAD OF WORLD CUP FINAL: SOURCES
At 1:10 p.m. ET, the air quality in Milwaukee was "very unhealthy" at an index of 287, but it was lowered to 133 in the 5 p.m. hour. The Brewers said that the game would be played as normally scheduled (American Family Field has a retractable roof), but fans were given the option to exchange their tickets for another game this season if they preferred.
Milwaukee has similar regulations for its roof as the Blue Jays, in that it should "be closed only in the event of impending rain or other adverse weather conditions," and the roof can only open if "in the opinion of the home club, the climatic environment has reached a level where fan comfort and enjoyment will be best served by opening the roof to the natural atmospheric conditions."
At 3:00 p.m. ET, the Guardians posted their lineup to social media. But less than two hours later, they announced the game was postponed to Saturday as part of a day-night doubleheader. If fans are unable to attend the makeup, they can exchange their tickets for a future game.
As of 5:00 p.m. ET, the air quality in Cleveland was at a 209, labeled "very unhealthy." Nearby Akron reached "hazardous" levels near 500 late Thursday.
The air quality index was a "very unhealthy" 241 in the Windy City in the afternoon but lowered to 138 later on. This is a rare Friday night game at Wrigley, but as of 5:10 p.m. ET, the game will be played.
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Strategist James Carville says one key trend shows Republicans will not show up for the midterms
Veteran Democratic strategist James Carville argued on Thursday that there seems to be a trend of less and less outspoken support for President Donald Trump, to the point where those left must be "world-class" buffoons.
As Carville and his co-host Al Hunt read through listener questions on their "Politics War Room" podcast, one homeowner from rural Texas commented, "One thing noticeable is the Trump flags and signs are few and far between. Don't get me wrong, I don't think these people are going to turn blue, but could this indicate lower turnout and less enthusiasm in the midterms?’"
"I really agree with Kay," Carville replied. "I think anecdotal evidence, when it piles up, you just can't discard it. And I have a little bit of the same experience she does."
Carville elaborated that he is currently in south Mississippi, and on trips to Walmart a year ago, people would recognize him and say, "‘Hey man, I love my guy Trump. Why don't you get behind him?’ Or something like that. Not overly threatening or rude."
JAMES CARVILLE SUGGESTS THE SPECIFIC HOLIDAY BY WHICH PRESIDENT TRUMP WILL RESIGN
"I never hear that anymore! I never see that!" Carville claimed. "And you used to see, like, Trump merch stands on Highway 90, or you would see them go ride around downtown in pickup trucks and Trump flags and everything. I haven't seen that since the year turned."
"I think what you're seeing is indicative of something. Look, are these people going to miraculously turn into Democrats overnight? No," he said, mirroring the listener’s comment. "But are they going to really run up the margin in rural Texas as they've done previously? No, I don't think so. That's why I'm pretty encouraged by it."
He asserted again that such anecdotes carry weight when they become a trend, saying, "And I do think visibility does matter. And if you observe it over a length of time, and it continues in one direction, I think it's saying something. And I think our friend in Texas is picking up on something smart."
Earlier in the podcast, Carville blasted people in Trump’s inner circle as "buffoons," but said the thing that truly makes him upset is that while he can understand why people voted for him in 2024, he cannot understand those still supporting him in 2026.
JAMES CARVILLE DOUBLES DOWN ON VIRAL PREDICTION THAT TRUMP 'WILL RESIGN NEXT SPRING'
"My rage is this, is the people that are still for Trump. Okay, half the country voted for him on Election Day 2024. I hear all kinds of justifications," he said. "I mean, I certainly disagreed with it, but I think there are actually some well-meaning, smart people that actually voted for Trump in November 2024."
"If you're still for Trump, you are a world-class buffoon," he said. "Everything that he told you he cared about and was going to do, he's done none of it. He didn’t focus on the American people or focus on anything. The only thing this man is focused on is making money."
"It's the outrage of this century that he's there and 36% of the American public approves of the job he's doing," he suggested.
"It's not beyond me how you ended up voting for Trump in 2024. I profoundly disagree with it. But people make decisions that I disagree with all the time," he concluded. "If you're still for him, you yourself are outrage, you've got to reexamine your life, because there's something wrong with it."
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"James Carville is a stone-cold loser who suffers from a severe and incurable disease known as Trump Derangement Syndrome, and it has rotted his peanut-sized brain," White House spokesman Davis Ingle told Fox News Digital when reached for comment.
Trump pushes Lindsey Graham's sister to run for US Senate after she gets appointment to finish out term
President Donald Trump is throwing his political weight behind the sister of the late Sen. Lindsey Graham, urging his sister, the newly appointed South Carolina Sen. Darline Graham Nordone, to run in next month’s special Republican primary and vowing to give her his "Complete and Total Endorsement."
The endorsement, which came in a Truth Social post Friday just days after South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster appointed Graham Nordone to temporarily fill the seat left vacant by her brother’s sudden death last week.
Graham Nordone will serve until the new Congress convenes in January, while Republicans who want the full term are set to compete in an Aug. 11 special primary.
"She is a spectacular person, and a true American Patriot. Lindsey was one of the greatest people and Senators I have ever known, and his sister shares his deep love of our Country, and the State of South Carolina," Trump said in his Truth post. "I asked Darline, for the Good of our Nation, to run for the U.S. Senate in the Special Republican Primary on Tuesday, August 11, 2026. I hope Darline does this, in that there would be nobody better to honor the legacy of her beloved brother, Lindsey."
Trump added that Graham Nordone "comes from an absolutely incredible family," arguing she "has been a WINNER all of her life and, should she accept, has my Complete and Total Endorsement."
The newly minted U.S. Senator represents a series of firsts for the Senate and for her home state as the first female senator from the Palmetto State and the first sister ever appointed to the upper chamber.
Privately, Graham Nordone has reportedly expressed interest in running for a full term.
GRAHAM'S DEATH IGNITES GOP SCRAMBLE FOR SENATE SEAT AS TRUMP HINTS HE ALREADY HAS A FAVORITE
Three people familiar with the deliberations told The Associated Press that Graham Nordone has started having conversations about a potential campaign.
She was appointed to fulfill the remainder of her brother’s term on Monday by McMaster, and was sworn in on Tuesday.
The filing period for a special primary runs from July 21 to July 28, and the primary is scheduled for Aug. 11.
Several other noteworthy politicians — including Reps. Russell Fry, Nancy Mace and Ralph Norman, as well as Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette — have been eyeing a run, the AP also reported.
Conservatives flip script on Newsom after he demanded 25th Amendment for Trump: 'Propped up a vegetable'
California Gov. Gavin Newsom ignited an online firestorm on Thursday evening when, in response to President Donald Trump’s election integrity speech, he suggested that it was time to invoke the 25th Amendment and remove the president for displaying what he described as cognitive impairment.
"The only thing missing in Donald Trump’s speech was tin foil. This was a legitimate 25th Amendment moment — the rambling of a mad king," Newsom said.
Newsom’s call to use the 25th Amendment plays into preexisting calls from Democrats to examine Trump’s cognitive performance, but also sparked controversy online about how Democrats could seriously question Trump’s mental state when they dismissed similar concerns about now-former President Joe Biden.
HOUSE DEMS UNVEIL BILL TO EXAMINE REMOVING TRUMP USING 25TH AMENDMENT
The 25th Amendment, ratified in 1967, allows the Cabinet to deem the president unfit for duty or allows Congress to establish an independent body to make that call.
To some critics, that case was much stronger under the last administration.
"You literally propped up a vegetable and lied to the American people about his cognitive decline for four years and never mentioned the 25th amendment once," the official Republican National Committee X account wrote in response, referring to Republican doubts that Biden had the mental acuity to run the country at age 82.
"Given Newsom's defense to this day of President Biden, calling him one of the greatest presidents ever, there's a saying around sitting this one out that applies here..." Fox News contributor Joe Concha wrote on X.
"Gavin Newsome wants to remove [Trump] from office for disclosing California could have tens of thousands of aliens illegally registered to vote and that China attacked 220 million voters," Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said.
Trump addressed the country on Thursday evening, informing the public that his administration had discovered a series of weaknesses in election integrity.
In particular, Trump said newly declassified documents would reveal foreign data theft carried out by China, that members of the U.S. government had known about election vulnerabilities for years, that Americans had been misled about those weaknesses and new evidence of "election fraud."
Fox News Digital could not independently verify the content of the documents that were released by the White House.
Like many Democrats, Newsom cast doubt on the motives behind Trump’s speech, which came just four months ahead of the November midterms.
'SHADOW GOVERNMENT': TRUMP CLAIMS INTEL COMMUNITY BRAGGED ABOUT HIDING CHINESE MEDDLING
"He wants to rig the election in 2026. He knows he is going to lose. That’s what that whole thing was about," Newsom said.
Other Democrats on Thursday rushed to Newsom’s support.
"Boom. Gov. Gavin Newsom calls for the 25th Amendment to be invoked after Trump’s unhinged speech tonight. He’s right! Trump is mentally deranged and unfit to be president," Harry Sisson, a Democratic influencer, wrote in a post to X.
Rep. Yassamin Ansari, D-Ariz., also echoed those calls.
"He lies with every breath he takes. How can anyone deny the urgency of the 25th Amendment at this point?"
This isn’t the first time Ansari has called to implement the 25th Amendment. Earlier this year, she joined other Democrats like Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., to call for Congress to remove Trump and establish an independent group to review the cognitive state of any president. The group would have included past presidents, physicians and other experts.
"Trump is clearly experiencing severe cognitive decline and leaders from every political affiliation have recognized this. He’s become a national security threat to the United States," Ansari said in April.
Newsom’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on if he would support the bill supported by Ansari.
Other conservatives raised concerns about how invoking the 25th Amendment might upend the country, taking it into uncharted territory.
DONALD TRUMP'S AGE IS NOT RECEIVING THE SAME 'SCRUTINY' AS BIDEN'S DID, ATLANTIC WRITER COMPLAINS
"Does anyone else think it’s weird that as he talks about Trump rigging an election, he simultaneously asks for the president’s cabinet to remove a duly elected president?" Joe Patterson, a California assemblyman, said in a post on social media.
"Yeah, Gavin … that would pose no risk to our democracy at all. Get real!"
Bryson DeChambeau flips out on rules officials before being assessed two-stroke penalty at Open Championship
Bryson DeChambeau went into the Royal Birkdale clubhouse in a tie for second place at the Open Championship, hardly in a position to complain.
However, rules officials then approached him about a potential transgression earlier on the fifth hole, and the two-time U.S. Open winner was not having it.
DeChambeau was with several officials and his caddie, having an animated conversation in the rough on the fifth hole, right near the area where DeChambeau took his second shot.
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After finding his ball in hip-high fescue, DeChambeau appeared to be walking through the weeds, stomping on the rough behind him and causing it to lie flat for his swing out of the rough. The conversation, apparently, was about whether DeChambeau improved his lie for the shot.
During the conversation, DeChambeau loudly pleaded his case, mimicking his pre-shot routine and waving his hands. In the clubhouse, DeChambeau reportedly argued that the trampled fescue was not directly in line with his swing.
However, the officials weren't buying it, and DeChambeau was given a two-stroke penalty. He then promptly went to the range, perhaps to work off some frustration.
His agent told reporters at the range, though, that he was actually considering not teeing off on Saturday.
DeChambeau initially shot a four-under 66 on Friday, but after it became a 70, he was in a tie for fifth at 5 under.
The solo leader is Lucas Herbert, whose 62 on Friday tied the lowest score ever recorded in a major round.
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