Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Elon Musk's DOGE savings dwarfed by deficit-ballooning Trump bill

 https://www.axios.com/2025/05/30/doge-elon-musk-savings-big-beautiful-blill

Updated May 30, 2025 - Politics & Policy

Elon Musk's DOGE savings dwarfed by deficit-ballooning Trump bill



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Musk "disappointed" in Trump's "big, beautiful bill"

Elon Musk looks on during a cabinet meeting hosted by US President Donald Trump in the Cabinet Room of the White House on March 24, 2025, in Washington, DC.

Elon Musk at the White House in March. Photo: Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

Updated May 29, 2025 - Politics & Policy

Musk's real DOGE legacy will be decided by courts long after his departure

Elon Musk's eyes are covered in a shadow by his black "MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN" hat as he stands in front of a Trump rally crowd.

Elon Musk wears a black "Make America Great Again" ball cap while attending a campaign rally with Donald Trump on Oct. 5, 2024. in Butler, Pa.(Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

 

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    Corruption Watch: Trump’s SEC Drops Major Case Against Crypto Giant Binance After Its Former CEO Partnered With Trump Family On Lucrative Crypto Venture

    https://accountable.us/corruption-watch-trumps-sec-drops-major-case-against-crypto-giant-binance-after-its-former-ceo-partnered-with-trump-family-on-lucrative-crypto-venture/

    Corruption Watch: Trump’s SEC Drops Major Case Against Crypto Giant Binance After Its Former CEO Partnered With Trump Family On Lucrative Crypto Venture

    Trump Administration
    May 30, 2025

    Is a Trump Pardon for Convicted Binance Founder “CZ” Next?

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – In the latest egregious case of President Trump’s family business dealings apparently influencing Trump administration actions, last night, Trump’s SEC announced it had voluntarily dismissed its lawsuit against Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, for allegedly misleading investors about trading controls, among other accusations. 

    The dropped case comes as the Trump Family’s World Liberty Financial Inc. – a crypto venture that has alarmed ethics experts – has grown increasingly close with Binance Founder CZ, going so far as to post photos arm-in-arm with the man who just finished his prison sentence late last year. CZ was convicted of felony money laundering and who allegedly wants to trade a stake in Binance with the Trump family for an administration pardon in order to facilitate Binance’s return to the U.S. market, which Zhao has denied.

    Then on May 1, 2025, Zach Witkoff, a WLFI co-founder and son of Trump Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, announced that Emirati state-backed investment fund MGX would make a $2 billion business deal with Binance using WLFI’s cryptocurrency coins, potentially generating “tens of millions of dollars a year in revenue for the Trump family and its partners at World Liberty.”

    Then on May 22, Trump’s WLFl “announced that its USD1 stablecoin, a cryptocurrency whose value is pegged to the U.S. dollar, started trading on Binance.” – and which “would be used to facilitate [the] $2 billion investment from Abu Dhabi-backed MGX into Binance.”

    The SEC’s decision also comes a week after President Trump held an openly corrupt gala at his golf club for winners of a dubious competition for top holders of Trump’s cryptocurrency meme coin $TRUMP, in which 80% of the Top 25 winners appeared to be either foreign or regulation dodgers. Accountable.US found that the #1 holder was in fact Chinese crypto billionaire Justin Sun, whose SEC fraud case was paused in February 2025 after Sun bought $75 million in tokens offered by Trump crypto venture WLFI. 

    The Trump SEC’s dropping a case against a new Trump family crypto business partner reeks of pay-to-play shenanigans and abuse of power. No one should be surprised if President Trump’s next move is to grant the pardon that the former Binance CEO and convicted money laundering law violator has allegedly been begging for – which would fast track the crypto exchange’s return to the U.S. and open even more avenues for the Trump family to profit off its ballooning crypto grift operations."

    Accountable.US Executive Director Tony Carrk.



     

    Trump was convicted of 34 felonies a year ago. He's still battling the case

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/anniversary-hush-money-conviction-trump-continues-fight-criminal/story?id=122325361 

     

    Trump was convicted of 34 felonies a year ago. He's still battling the case

    The 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals has set oral arguments for June 11.

    May 30, 2025, 8:49 AM


    One year ago today, a jury of 12 New Yorkers convicted Donald Trump for falsifying business records as part of an alleged hush money scheme to influence the 2016 election.

    The conviction left an indelible mark on Trump -- making him the first president or former president to be found guilty of a crime -- and his fight to erase that legacy continues to this day.

    On June 11, a federal appeals court in Manhattan is set to hear oral arguments in the president's renewed legal fight to move his criminal case from state to federal court.

    Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg opposes the move -- arguing that a case can't be removed to federal court after conviction -- but Trump's lawyers have argued the "unprecedented criminal prosecution of a former and current president of the United States belongs in federal court."

    Trump was found guilty on 34 felony counts after prosecutors alleged that he engaged in a "scheme" to boost his chances during the 2016 presidential election through a series of hush money payments to adult film actress Stormy Daniels and the falsification of New York business records to cover up that alleged criminal conduct.

    "I did my job, and we did our job," Bragg said following Trump's conviction. "There are many voices out there, but the only voice that matters is the voice of the jury, and the jury has spoken."

    Ten days before Trump was sworn in as president last November, New York Judge Juan Merchan sentenced him to an unconditional discharge -- without prison, fines or probation -- saying it was the "only lawful sentence" to prevent "encroaching upon the highest office in the land."

    PHOTO: New York State Judge Juan Merchan sentences President-elect Donald Trump as he appears remotely alongside his lawyer Todd Blanche for a sentencing hearing at New York Criminal Court in New York City, Jan. 10, 2025.
    New York State Judge Juan Merchan sentences President-elect Donald Trump as he appears remotely alongside his lawyer Todd Blanche for a sentencing hearing as prosecutor Joshua Steinglass listens...
    Jane Rosenberg/Reuters

    "I won the election in a massive landslide, and the people of this country understand what's gone on. This has been a weaponization of government," Trump told the court during his sentencing.

    Trump continues to vehemently deny any wrongdoing, and his lawyers have argued that his conviction relied on evidence and testimony that related to his official acts as president, including social media posts from his official Twitter account as president and testimony from his former communications director Hope Hicks.

    The trial took place one month before the Supreme Court delivered a landmark ruling expanding the scope of presidential immunity, and Trump's lawyers have argued that the evidence would have not been permitted based on the high court's ruling.

    Trump's lawyers attempted to use that argument to throw out the case before Trump's January sentencing, but the argument was rejected by Judge Juan Merchan, two New York appeals courts, and the Supreme Court.

    "The alleged evidentiary violations at President-Elect Trump's state-court trial can be addressed in the ordinary course on appeal," the Supreme Court said in a brief unsigned opinion, though four justices said they would have granted Trump's application.

    For Trump's criminal defense, he relied on then-defense attorneys Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, who now serve as the deputy attorney general and principal associate deputy attorney general. Earlier this week, Trump announced that he plans to nominate Bove -- who led a purge of career law enforcement officials before the Senate confirmed his nomination to help run the DOJ -- to the United States Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit.

    With his former defense attorneys now working for the government, Trump earlier this year tapped the elite Manhattan law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell to handle his criminal appeal.

    Lawyers with the Department of Justice also filed an amicus brief in the case this week to argue that the case should be heard -- and thrown out -- by a federal court because the jury's conviction relied on evidence that was covered by presidential immunity.

    "That President Trump's defense in fact takes the form of a new constitutional immunity announced by the Supreme Court after his trial ended, rather than a new statute enacted by Congress, should if anything cut in the President's favor," lawyers with the Department of Justice argued in a brief submitted on Tuesday.

    The appeal -- as well as the ongoing appeal of Trump's $83 million judgment in the E. Jean Carroll civil case and half-billion-dollar civil fraud case -- is proceeding on uncharted legal grounds as Trump wields the power of the presidency in his defense. He has characterized the prosecutors who pursued the cases against him as politically motivated, and has touted his electoral victory last November as a political acquittal.

    "The real verdict is going to be Nov. 5 by the people," Trump told reporters as he left court following his conviction last year. "And they know what happened here, and everybody knows what happened here."

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  • 43-Foot-Tall Naked Trump Marionette Debuts in Las Vegas | Photos

     https://www.thewrap.com/43-foot-tall-naked-trump-marionette-las-vegas/

     The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette

     

    The ‘Crooked and Obscene’ project — made of foam over rebar and weighing nearly 6,000 pounds — will be toured across the U.S.

    The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette
    Via "Crooked and Obscene"

    Las Vegas is home to a lot that might raise a pair of eyebrows, but a new art installation depicting Donald Trump as a naked, 43-foot-tall marionette might raise them right off your face.

    Made of foam over rebar and weighing approximately 6,000 pounds, the gigantic naked Trump will travel the United States as part of the “Crooked and Obscene Tour” but first, you can see it in person and in the wild at 13460 Apex Harbor Ln in Las Vegas right now.

    Per the tour’s organizers, portraying Trump in the nude “is intentional, serving as a bold statement on transparency, vulnerability, and the public personas of political figures.”

    They also aim to spark conversation about “transparency—or lack thereof—in politics, challenging viewers to think critically about political influence,” according to press materials.

    Those who can’t make it to Las Vegas will have opportunity to see it on tour stops at other locations across the United States. Dates and cities for the tour have not yet been announced. We’ll keep you posted.

    Enjoy — or ‘enjoy’ — some photos of the project below:

    The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette
    Via “Crooked and Obscene”
    The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette
    Via “Crooked and Obscene”
    The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette
    Via “Crooked and Obscene”
    The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette
    Via “Crooked and Obscene”
    The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette
    Via “Crooked and Obscene”
    The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette
    Via “Crooked and Obscene”
    The Crooked and Obscene Giant, Naked Trump Marionette
    Via “Crooked and Obscene”

    This isn’t the first time a nude statute of Trump has appeared in public, though it certainly dwarfs its predecessor. In 2016 Joshua “Ginger” Monroe was hired at the art collective INDECLINE to create five life-size naked statues of the former president as part of a project called “The Emperor Has No Balls.”

    The statues were put up without permits at locations in Seattle, New York City, Cleveland, Los Angeles and San Francisco; naturally they were soon removed by police.