West
GOP lawmaker rips 'lost in the wilderness' DOGE protesters amid chaos at her town hall: 'Highly orchestrated'
EXCLUSIVE: Wyoming GOP Rep. Harriet Hageman spoke to Fox News Digital about the raucous Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) protesters who showed up at her recent town hall and about the acts of “domestic terrorism” occurring at Tesla dealerships, which she says Democrats are doing everything they can to ignore.
“My takeaway from that was that it was highly orchestrated,” Hageman said about two of her town halls last week in Wyoming that were disrupted by liberal protesters whose actions went viral on social media.
“This was not grassroots. I do believe that quite a few of the people may have been from outside of the state of Wyoming, or at least outside of that community. I have now held 75 town halls in the last three years, and there’s only two of them that have been disrupted.”
Hageman told Fox News Digital that Democrats are involved in a “national movement” to try and “shout Republicans down” while not bringing any new ideas to the table at the same time.
MEDIA, DEMS CELEBRATE TESLA WOES AS ANGER OVER ELON MUSK’S ROLE IN TRUMP ADMIN CONTINUES
GOP Rep. Harriet Hageman spoke to Fox News Digital about the nationwide DOGE protests. (Storyful/Getty)
“The Democrats are so lost in the wilderness right now because their policies have failed, will continue to fail, and the American public woke up as to how bad they are,” Hageman said.
“They’re bad for kids. They’re bad for adults. They’re bad for healthcare. They’re bad in terms of education, business, national security. You can go on and on and on by almost every single metric. I’m not aware of one Democrat policy that I can even remotely agree with just because they’ve gone so off the rails. And so, because they’ve lost the narrative, because they’ve lost the support of the American people, they’re lashing out at people like me.”
Some of the protesters were chanting about Jan. 6 in the state where Hageman soundly defeated incumbent GOP Rep. Liz Cheney, the face of the movement to impeach Trump over Jan. 6, which Hageman said was a sign that the protests were not organic.
“I beat Liz Cheney by almost 40%,” Hageman said. “My election last November was by an enormous landslide that was similar, if not bigger. Yes, there are Democrats in Wyoming, but that’s not what we’re seeing. The national leadership, Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer, they made it clear that because they cannot engage in the debate of ideas, they’re going to shut us down from speaking, and that was clearly the intent of what they were trying to do in Albany County.”
PAM BONDI THREATENS PROSECUTION AMID DOGE’S FINDINGS ABOUT FRAUD: ‘WE’RE COMING AFTER YOU’
Five Tesla vehicles were set on fire and shot at in what police are investigating as a “targeted attack” at a local repair center in Las Vegas on Tuesday, March 18, 2025. (Hal Sparks via Storyful)
Hageman explained that Democrats “do that because they cannot engage with a legitimate discussion or analysis of the issue they know they’re going to lose” while explaining that she will continue to hold town halls and stand up to the protesters.
“They just simply are trying to prevent us from being able to speak,” Hageman said. “Didn’t allow that to happen. I fought through it and I made my points. I did my town hall, I informed people of what was going on in D.C. and I handled it, and we went on to the next one the next time.“
Some Democrats in recent weeks have accused Republicans of not showing up to town halls to answer questions from constituents about DOGE and the Trump agenda. Hageman told Fox News Digital she believes the opposite is true.
“I think it’s kind of funny that people are saying that because there’s evidence on the internet that that’s not true,” Hageman explained. “We’re seeing the town halls. And again, I think what is happening at these are the activists are coming in and attempting to disrupt them. They want their viral moment. They want the one moment when they get somebody to say something silly, or they take something out of context.”
Hageman told Fox News Digital that Democrats have created a “dangerous situation” and that she has carried elevated security at recent events, which has kept the protests in line, but she has concerns about “taking resources away from the rest of the community.”
ELON MUSK SAYS DOGE CUTS NECESSARY, BUT FACE HEADWINDS ACCORDING TO FOX POLL
Elon Musk speaks during an event in the Oval Office with President Donald Trump at the White House on Feb. 11. (AP Images)
Fox News Digital spoke to Hageman about the violence at Tesla dealerships across the country in response to Elon Musk’s DOGE actions, which have resulted in cars being burned and Attorney General Pam Bondi describing the attacks as “domestic terrorism.”
“When you look at what Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries are saying, when you say what Jasmine Crockett is saying, when you look at the attacks against Teslas and Tesla dealerships and attempting to dox people, they are intentionally trying to get somebody hurt or have a very scary moment take place at these events, and that’s entirely inappropriate under our form of government,” Hageman said.
Fox News Digital asked Hageman about the overall unwillingness by Democrats to condemn the Tesla dealership violence as “domestic terrorism” despite not being shy about using the domestic terrorism label in the past.
“The domestic terrorism comes from the left, not the right, and they know that. It is a form of projection and I don’t think that I’ve ever seen anybody or any group of people who are better at projection than Democrats,” Hageman said. “They engage in this kind of rhetoric and violent behavior, and then turn around and try to paint parents at school board meetings or conservative Catholics as domestic terrorists and really it’s a point of deflection.”
“It’s to try to say, hey, don’t look at us. We’re not the bad guys. We may be torching Teslas. We may spray painting swastikas on vehicles, but don’t look at us. We’re not the ones doing it, it’s the guy who’s trying to protect his daughter from having some dude go into the locker room. That’s a domestic terrorist. And again, it’s become silly. It’s become very obvious what it is that they’re trying to do this situation with the Teslas.“
Hageman told Fox News Digital that “a badger is the most dangerous when you’ve got them cornered” and that Democrats today are in that position because they are “losing their base,” which has always been “big government.”
Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley is seen speaking to an audience at a town hall event in Hampton, Iowa, on Friday. Outside the event, he was captured on video being heckled by a hostile crowd. (x.com/@ChuckGrassley)
“Their base has been agencies,” Hageman said. “Their base has been the National Education Association and the public unions. And what you’re seeing with President Trump and DOGE and conservatives in Congress is we’re saying it’s a new day. There’s a new sheriff in town, and we’re going to do things better.”
“We’re going to do things different. We’re taking our country back. And I think that they’re getting pretty hysterical. They’re getting pretty scared of how they’re going to keep the gravy train going in light of the fact that they’re not going to be able to be laundering money through these federal agencies. And I think that we’re seeing them lash out at these town halls and in, in the way that they’re treating business owners.”
Recent polling suggests that a strong majority of Americans support DOGE’s mission of cutting waste, fraud and abuse, although many have expressed concerns about the way the cuts are being made. Hageman told Fox News Digital that the plan would not be perfect, but that the vast majority of Wyoming voters are behind DOGE.
“There’s going to be mistakes but don’t try to convince me that we haven’t been having problems with federal agencies for the decades that they have been in existence,” Hageman said. “So it is interesting to me that they want to act like any kind of a blip or a glitch is somehow the first time in the history of our country something hasn’t worked exactly right. The people in Wyoming strongly support the efforts of this administration to root out waste, fraud and abuse.”
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Alaska
Delmonico’s Love Letter To America: A Red, White, And Blue Baked Alaska
America 250 Baked Alaska
Delmonico’s
In the conversation about the world’s greatest steakhouses, Delmonico’s is always among the shortlist of names.
The Lower Manhattan institution is a destination for New Yorkers and tourists alike, an attraction as much as a restaurant. First opened in 1837, it is widely recognized as America’s first fine-dining restaurant. It was here that dishes that have become cultural symbols of this country as much as they are cuisine were born: the Delmonico Steak, Lobster Newberg, Eggs Benedict, and perhaps most famously, Baked Alaska.
Now, as the United States prepares to celebrate its 250th birthday, Delmonico’s is giving one of its signature creations, a dessert that’s as much a cultural symbol as it is a sweet ending, a patriotic makeover.
On July 4, the restaurant will debut the America 250 Baked Alaska, a reinterpretation of the classic dessert that celebrates both the nation’s history and North America’s native ingredients. The striking red, white, and blue confection has already earned the nickname “America’s Birthday Cake.”
The dessert was created by acclaimed pastry chef Miro Uskokovic of Hani’s Bakery + Cafe in the East Village, who also serves as Delmonico’s consulting pastry chef. While his interpretation is rooted in the original version, he has reimagined it with a distinctly American theme.
Pawpaw, the largest fruit native to North America, becomes a rich ice cream. Wild blueberry lemonade sorbet adds a bright, tart layer, while pecan cake- made with the only major tree nut indigenous to North America- forms the base. Mixed berry jam, toasted meringue, and fresh seasonal berries complete the dessert.
The cone-shaped presentation also pays tribute to history.
The original Baked Alaska dates to 1867, when the legendary French chef Charles Ranhofer, who headed the kitchen at Delmonico’s in the late 19th century, created the dessert to commemorate the United States’ purchase of Alaska from Russia. Epicurean lore goes that Ranhofer originally called the dessert “Alaska, Florida,” highlighting the contrast between frozen ice cream and warm toasted meringue. He later featured elaborate mountain-shaped versions in his 1894 cookbook, “The Epicurean.”
Today, nearly 160 years later, Delmonico’s is revisiting that theatrical presentation while looking ahead to its next chapter.
“This dessert is a piece of American history,” says Dennis Turcinovic, owner and executive culinary partner of Delmonico’s Hospitality Group. “Delmonico’s has never just served food. For nearly 190 years, it has served hope, opportunity, and the American dream. Today, we’re celebrating that with our red, white, and blue Baked Alaska.”
For Uskokovic, it’s both a history lesson and a celebration.
“America’s 250th anniversary presents an opportunity to celebrate not only our nation’s history, but the evolution of American cuisine,” he said in a release announcing the dessert. “We wanted to revisit one of the most important desserts in Delmonico’s history while showcasing ingredients that are uniquely American.”
According to a release, the dessert will be available as a serving for two for $40, with production limited to just 10 each day because of its labor-intensive preparation. Larger versions serving 10 to 12 guests can also be ordered for private celebrations.
The best part? For non-New Yorkers clamoring for a chance to try the dessert, the America 250 Baked Alaska is here to stay as a permanent fixture on the menu. And when Delmonico’s Reserve, the brand’s upcoming Midtown Manhattan restaurant, opens next year, New Yorkers and visitors alike can order it there.
Arizona
With water cuts looming in Arizona in US, locals fight data centres
Every morning Marisol Winfrey Herrera’s three-and-a-half-year-old daughter Jo reminds her to turn off the tap while washing her hands and brushing her teeth.
When they leave home, she reminds her mother to keep a bottle of ice with them to offer it to homeless people, who they sometimes find wilting in the Tucson heat. At first, they press the ice-filled bottles on the homeless folks to help them revive, then they offer the water to drink and hydrate. At her daycare, Jo is taught water-saving habits to combat Tucson’s soaring heat.
It is what prompted Herrera to join No Desert Data Center, a residents’ group that opposes two large data centres coming up on either side of Tucson – the $3.6bn project on the city’s southeast edge and a $5bn project on its northwest side in the town of Marana, together known as Project Blue.
The group believes these would consume more water and power than the city set in the Sonoran Desert can afford.
“We are in the middle of a 30-year drought, which is now an extreme drought,” says Lisa Shipek, co-executive director of the Watershed Management Group, a Tucson-based nonprofit.
“Water was a unifying theme in our campaign. The Colorado River cuts are looming, and this project would take water away,” Herrera told Al Jazeera.
Water flows in the Colorado River, which provides much of Tucson’s water through the Central Arizona Project canal system, have dropped by 20 percent since the year 2000 compared with water flows in the 20th century due to climate change, melting snow caps and warmer weather, making water cuts to Tucson imminent as the state could face as much as 77 percent water cuts.
“We say Not One Drop for data centres,” says Herrera, speaking of the campaign’s particularly emotive appeal for residents as water cuts get deeper and temperatures rise, with Tucson recording the warmest weather in 125 years last July and August.
Beale Infrastructure, a San Francisco-based company that is owned by investment management company Blue Owl in New York, had asked the city of Tucson to acquire 290 acres that were outside city limits for Project Blue. That would make it the city’s largest water consumer and among its largest power consumers. Beale did not respond to an emailed request for comment.
But at city council meetings, City Councillor Kevin Dahl began seeing hundreds of residents turn up to express their opposition to the project.
“Not for many issues do we get so much response,” he said. Herrera was among those who went.
Pitting environment against unions
At council meetings, Beale executives proposed that Project Blue could be the economic engine the city needed. It would create a few thousand jobs for construction workers, ironmongers, plumbers and other such workers during the construction of the project and a few hundred after that.
“Sometimes people travel as far as Phoenix for work,” Dahl said about Arizona’s largest city, which is nearly a two-hour drive from Tucson.
The project could bring jobs closer. Beale also expected the project to generate nearly $250m in taxes for the city, county and state in the first 10 years.
This left councillors with a difficult decision to make, weighing the project’s economic benefits against allocating it a share of the city’s increasingly scarce water and power.
Activists also raised concerns about whether Tucson Electric Power (TEP), the power utility, would raise rates for consumers so it could expand capacity to provide power for Project Blue. After raising rates by 10 percent in 2023, TEP proposed a 14 percent rate hike in June 2025 for grid upgrades made in the previous year.
Lee Ziesche, an activist from the Democratic Socialists of America who is campaigning to make TEP a public utility, said Project Blue could “lead to higher temperatures and higher rates” because of the heat island effect of the air conditioners and higher rates for power.
She often hears from residents that a rate hike would make it hard to pay bills or put on air conditioning, even as the number of 100-degree Fahrenheit (37.8 degree-Celsius) days has increased in Tucson, which is among the hottest cities in the United States.
The same concerns of needing ramped-up air conditioning would plague data centres too, experts say.
“The viability of data centres in Arizona will always be subject to climate change and heat risks,” says Kate Gordon, chief executive of California Forward, a think tank that works on a sustainable economy.
“The heat in Arizona makes energy less efficient, and servers heat up, so projects will need higher amounts of water and cooling, which developers have to balance against a possibly lower real estate and labour cost,” she said. “I am always amazed at how climate does not figure in business plans.”
Dahl and Andres Cano, a supervisor in Pima County, in which Tucson is located, had discussions with Beale representatives.
“We thought they would go elsewhere if the city did not acquire the land” for the project, Dahl said. Cano also came away with the same impression.
In August 2025, Tucson councillors voted unanimously not to acquire the land for the project or provide it with water and power. In December, Cano became one of only two supervisors in Pima County to oppose the project, and it was approved for construction in an unincorporated part of the county.
“It will create short-term construction jobs for what will ultimately be a project with few wins,” Cano said. “This pitted the environment and unions, but industry is not for unions. This will have just about 100 jobs when it is done.”
With no access to Tucson’s water supply, Beale decided to cool its servers with air conditioners rather than water and use a closed-loop water system, so it would recycle and reuse water.
But Vivek Bharathan, a spokesperson for the No Desert Data Center, said using air conditioners would increase power usage.
Nearly half of TEP’s power comes from fracking, he says. Data centre demand will only mean “more fracking somewhere else, climate and health consequences all along the way”.
The state’s largest data centre
Even as Project Blue was making its way through a fraught approval process, Beale announced another data centre project in the neighbouring farming town of Marana. It was to be spread over 600 acres (242 hectares), twice the size of Project Blue. The area was spread over two farm plots, one owned by the Mormon church and the other by a family trust of city council member, Herb Kai.
This project, too, is slated to bring thousands of construction jobs to a farming town as well as tax revenues.
But when Jackie McGuire, a mother of three and former Wall Street banker, heard about it, she and other residents launched a campaign to stop the land from being rezoned for a data centre. Residents wanted Marana to stay a farming town.
McGuire, who works as a research analyst, said the data centres’ servers and large air conditioners that would be installed to keep them running would raise the project’s cost and make Marana unbearably hot.
Temperatures rose by up to 2.2F (1.22C) downwind from data centres in the Phoenix area, a study published in May had found.
“The heat generated will be like one to two million space heaters,” McGuire says. “It can go up to 112 degrees [44.4C] here already. The heat island effect could make Marana uninhabitable.”
The Marana data centre will be provided power by TEP and Trico, which announced a 7.23 percent rate hike in January.
McGuire and other residents campaigned to have a referendum on whether the land could be rezoned for a data centre. Their plea was not successful, and the city council approved the rezoning of the land.
But the experience of the campaign had invigorated McGuire, and she decided to run for city council herself. The central issue of her campaign is to bring transparency to the data centre’s functioning.
Even as the campaigns in Pima County and Marana raged on, La Osa, the state’s largest data centre project, took shape in Tucson’s neighbouring Pinal County. The 3,300-acre project by the Vermaland real estate group was expected to house 59 data centres and two of its own natural gas facilities, as well as a utility-scale battery storage system.
But residents worried about noise pollution from protracted project construction and a possible increase in power costs.
“I’m worried about the constituents in that area, about the power bills going up, even though you’re saying that they’re going to pay for it,” Pinal County Supervisor Rich Vitiello said in a board of supervisors meeting on May 27.
In the face of such opposition, a La Osa lawyer spoke at the meeting to say the project had been scaled down and would now house 11 data centres from the 59 planned earlier.
‘A straw to the aquifer’
Sharing limited water has long been an emotive issue in the state, and the looming Colorado River cuts and data centre projects have brought such concerns to a head.
Arizona fought one of the longest-running cases, stretching more than three decades, in the US Supreme Court over the sharing of Colorado River water with California. Eventually, Congress adjudicated to provide California with a greater share of the water, which turbocharged its economic growth.
“No water can flow into Tucson and Phoenix unless California gets its full share,” says Jason Robison, co-director of the Gina Guy Center for Land and Water Law at the University of Wyoming College of Law. “Arizona has always been in a tough spot.”
It strengthened the state’s long-held tradition of conservation.
“Arizona communities have been preparing for the drought conditions we see today since 1980,” a spokesperson for the Arizona Department of Water Resources said in an emailed response.
Authorities have curtailed lawns in Tucson, he said, and educational campaigns of the kind Herrera’s daughter underwent are the norm.
It has meant that groundwater reserves go deep, and homeowners are assured of a water supply before it is given to data centres or farms.
“The use by data centres is low compared to farm use, especially alfalfa and hay,” says Eric Kuhn, retired general manager of the Colorado River Water Conservation District and co-author of Science Be Dammed: How Ignoring Inconvenient Science Drained the Colorado River.
However, “data centres are not under the same rules to replenish water” as other industries, says Sharon Medgal, director of the Water Resources Research Center at the University of Arizona. “So it adds a straw to the aquifer.”
Arizona’s governor, Katie Hobbs, who is up for re-election in November, has represented to the Bureau of Reclamation that the state is home to essential industry, including semiconductors, space and data centres, and so needs a higher share of water from the Colorado River. Water, as well as its use for data centres, has been an important issue in primary races across the state.
Construction began for Project Blue at the end of April. No Desert Data Centers’ activists arrived just after dawn to protest. Within days, they found subcontractors bringing in water to control dust on site from construction. County authorities cited Beale.
Then Beale began digging wells on site after reportedly receiving permits allowing that from the Arizona Department of Water Resources. This is likely for 31,000 gallons (more than 117,000 litres) a year, which is just enough for toilets and kitchens and will likely be recycled for reuse after.
“This may not yet be a winning story,” Bharathan, the spokesperson for the No Desert Data Center, said. “But it is a continuing story.”
California
California GOP delegates on LGBT issues, LA decline, Medicaid fraud | Fox News Video
California GOP delegates Roxanne Hoge and Elizabeth Barcohana join Trace Gallagher to discuss multiple issues impacting California.
California GOP delegates Roxanne Hoge and Elizabeth Barcohana dissect the state’s pressing issues with Trace Gallagher. They criticize the SF Giants’ ‘Pride Night’ controversy and players’ right to religious expression. The delegates also discuss Los Angeles’s economic decline and Sacramento’s expensive homeless campsite, highlighting concerns about over-regulation and social issues. They conclude by addressing California’s large-scale Medicaid fraud, suggesting a lack of accountability.
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