Senate committee approves Trump nominee Markwayne Mullin to lead DHS, heads for full vote – live

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The Senate committee that held a confirmation hearing for Markwayne Mullin to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), approved Trump’s nomination, creating a glide path for his confirmation when the full chamber casts its votes in the coming days.

Notably, Republican senator Rand Paul, who chairs the Senate homeland committee voted against Mullin’s confirmation, after they continued to clash during Wednesday’s hearing. Meanwhile, Democratic senator John Fetterman supported Mullin’s nomination.

“My AYE is rooted in a strong committed, constructive working relationship with Senator Mullin for our nation’s security,” Fetterman said in a statement.

Trump noted that he is “not putting troops anywhere”, which is different to past statements where he refused to rule out the possibility of boots on the ground.

He repeated his familiar lines about the economic blowback of the war as something temporary:

Oil prices will go up, the economy will go down a little bit. I thought it would be worse, much worse … It’s not bad, and it’s going to be over with pretty soon.

When asked whether he is satisfied with Japan’s support on Iran, Donald Trump said that they plan to discuss this further during their meeting. He noted hat based on statements from Japan in recent days, he believes they “are really stepping up to the plate”.

This, he says, is in contrast to Nato counties.

In a short while, we’ll hear from Donald Trump when he welcomes the prime minister of Japan, Takaichi Sanae to the White House.

This will be Sanae’s first visit to Washington, since she took office in October last year.

This week, when was asked about sending assistance to help the US reopen the strait of Hormuz, the prime minister said she was “currently examining what Japan can do independently and what is possible within the legal framework”. However, Trump has seen a number of his allies’ uncertainty about getting involved in the war on Iran as tantamount to dismissal.

We’ll bring you the latest lines as things get under way.

Tulsi Gabbard also said today that the US and Israel have different objectives in the war on Iran.

Her remarks follow an earlier statement by defense secretary Pete Hegseth that Washington has its own objectives in the war, compared to its allies.

US officials are being quizzed on a statement made by Donald Trump that the US “knew nothing” about Israel’s attack on Iran’s South Pars gasfield yesterday. Israeli sources have apparently told local media otherwise.

“The ‌objectives that have been laid out by the president are different from the objectives that have been laid out ⁠by the Israeli government,” Gabbard ⁠told the House intelligence committee today.

“We can see through the operations that the Israeli government has ⁠been focused on disabling the ⁠Iranian leadership. The ⁠president has stated that his objectives are to destroy Iran’s ballistic missiles ‌launching capability, their ballistic missile production capability and their ‌navy.”

In a hearing before the House intelligence committee today, Tulsi Gabbard was asked the decision by her top counter-terrorism official, Joe Kent, to step down from his post.

In a line of questoning from Republican congresswoman Elise Stefanik, the director of national intelligence did not say whether she agreed with the allegations made in Kent’s resignation letter, where he claims that Iran posed no imminent threat, and the US was ultimately pressured to start a war by Israel.

“He said a lot of things in though that letter,” Gabbard said. “Ultimately, we have provided the president with the intelligence assessments, and the president is elected by the American people and makes his own decisions based on the information that’s available to him.”

When Stefanik asked Gabbard whether Kent’s statements blaming Israel for America’s involvement in the war concerned her, Gabbard replied plainly: “Yes.”

Elizabeth Warren is now the fourth senator to endorse Graham Platner, the insurgent candidate running for the Democratic nomination for the US Senate in Maine.

Warren said that Platner has “inspired people with his populist agenda for a government on the side of working families – not the billionaires and giant corporations”.

The Massachusetts lawmaker joins Bernie Sanders, the independent senator from Vermont, as well as Democrats Ruben Gallego of Arizona, and Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, in backing Platner.

An oyster farmer and former marine, Platner has raised substantial cash on his run to oust incumbent Susan Collins – the moderate Republican lawmaker who has represented Maine in the Senate since 1997. Throughout his campaign he’s decried the “establishment political system that serves the interests of the ultra wealthy”.

In June, however, Platner will face off against the state’s governor, Janet Mills, in the Democratic primary.

It’s a hotly contested election for a seat that Democrats are confident they can pick up in this year’s midterms, to ultimately claw back more control in the upper chamber of Congress.

Platner, a political outsider who is making his first foray into public office, has set his campaign in contrast to that of Mills – an established political voice in Maine.

In the last six months, however, multiple controversies from Platner’s past have come to light, and he’s been embattled in a morass of damage control while. In October, there were a steady drip of reports featuring Platner’s unearthed racist, sexist and homophobic online comments. Then, Platner tried to get ahead of the story when he revealed, and then covered, a tattoo on his chest that closely resembles a Nazi symbol.

This week, Mills continued spotlight Platner’s internet history and launched an ad that featured women reacting to Platner’s 2013 Reddit post – where he said that survivors and victims of sexual assault should “take some responsibility for themselves and not get so fucked up”.

In November, Platner told the Guardian that Collins is the “charade of fake moderation”, and argued that Mills is running the “same kind of old-fashioned campaign” that won’t be enough to offer lasting change.

“The reason that I am in the race is because I don’t believe that the governor and I have the same politics,” said in an interview. “People go into power and then don’t try to do anything big. Everything is like playing around in the margins. I think that that is the kind of politics that comes out of someone who’s been in this system for as long as the governor has.”

The UK has joined European allies and Japan in saying they were ready “to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the strait of Hormuz”.

In a joint statement, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Japan condemned Iran’s attacks on commercial vessels and oil and gas facilities in the Gulf, while expressing “deep concern” over the escalating conflict.

This comes ahead of Donald Trump’s meeting with Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, later today.

The Senate committee that held a confirmation hearing for Markwayne Mullin to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), approved Trump’s nomination, creating a glide path for his confirmation when the full chamber casts its votes in the coming days.

Notably, Republican senator Rand Paul, who chairs the Senate homeland committee voted against Mullin’s confirmation, after they continued to clash during Wednesday’s hearing. Meanwhile, Democratic senator John Fetterman supported Mullin’s nomination.

“My AYE is rooted in a strong committed, constructive working relationship with Senator Mullin for our nation’s security,” Fetterman said in a statement.

Donald Trump is in Washington today, and we’re going to see him at 11am ET when he welcomes the prime minister of Japan, Sanae Takaichi, to the White House.

Trump will first host a bilateral meeting, and then a dinner for the prime minister – the first woman to hold the position in Japan’s history.

We’ll be keeping a close eye on any lines about the war in Iran, after Trump expressed frustration at Japan, among others, for not sending warships to help the US reopen the strait of Hormuz.

Earlier this week, the president lashed out at European and Asian allies on social media and in the Oval Office for their reluctance to heed his calls and assist Operation Epic Fury. Trump then insisted that the US military does not “need or desire” their help.

It’s worth noting that as oil prices continue to soar, Brent Crude has hit $113 a barrel – one of its highest levels since the conflict with Iran began.

This comes after Israel launched an attack on the South Pars field – which Iran shares with Qatar – on Wednesday. Donald Trump claimed that the US “knew nothing” about Israel’s offensive, but said on Truth Social that they will make “no more attacks” on the field, provided that Iran abstains from attacking Qatar’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities. Otherwise, the president threatened to “massively blow up” the entire gas field if Iran carries out any more retaliatory attacks.

Hegseth didn’t add any more information about how much intelligence the US had ahead of Israel’s attack on the Sout Pars field at his press conference today. “Iran has weaponised energy for decades. Israel clearly sent a warning,” he said.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com