Politics
Inauguration Draws Leaders From Europe’s Right
Mainstream conservative lawmakers and politicians from Europe are planning to attend President-elect Donald J. Trump’s inauguration. But the European contingent is also expected to include leaders of some parties that are on the right-wing fringes in their own countries or have only recently begun to gain greater acceptance at home.
Many of the European politicians who have flocked to Washington share Mr. Trump’s anti-immigrant fervor.
Headlining the European attendees is Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy, according to her official agenda. Ms. Meloni, a conservative, was one of the first leaders to visit Mr. Trump at Mar-a-Lago after his election, on Jan. 4.
Ms. Meloni, who is trying to stop the flows of migrants to her country, is considered one of Europe’s strongest leaders, and her supporters hope that she will emerge as a privileged ally of Mr. Trump in Europe.
The most notable absence is Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary, one of Mr. Trump’s most fervent fans in Europe. Despite being widely admired by many American conservatives as an ideological beacon and praised by Mr. Trump as “fantastic,” Hungary’s proudly illiberal leader was not invited to attend, according to a Facebook post by Zoltan Kovacs, Hungary’s secretary of state for international communications.
“To be crystal clear: Viktor Orbán will not participate in the event. President Trump’s team — in accordance with tradition — did not invite any foreign heads of state or government,” Mr. Kovacs said.
That is clearly not true. Mr. Trump has made a point of breaking with tradition and inviting foreign leaders to attend, including Xi Jinping of China. (Mr. Xi is sending the country’s vice-president.)
Here are some of the Europeans who plan to make an appearance
Éric Zemmour, who has been convicted in France of inciting racial hatred, has announced he was invited to attend the inauguration. Mr. Zemmour has written best sellers denouncing the supposed decline of a nation whose Christian roots were being undermined by Muslim immigrants and their descendants.
The former television pundit, whose 2022 run for the French presidency was inspired by Mr. Trump’s campaign, wrote on X, “The wind of freedom blowing through the United States will soon be blowing through France.”
Mr. Zemmour won only 7 percent of the vote in the 2022 presidential election, and his party has only one lawmaker at the E.U. level — Sarah Knafo, Mr. Zemmour’s partner, who is planning to attend the inauguration with him.
France’s much more powerful nationalist, anti-immigrant party, the National Rally, said it was sending a delegation, but neither Marine Le Pen, the party’s longtime leader, nor Jordan Bardella, its current president, will attend.
While Mr. Trump’s anti-immigrant message resonates with the National Rally, which is considered far-right in France, his wrecking-ball approach to politics runs counter to the party’s yearslong, and increasingly successful, efforts to shed a more extreme image.
Mr. Bardella told CNews television last week that he did not understand the “fad” of racing “to get your picture taken in front of Donald Trump during his inauguration speech.”
The contingent of Germans planning to attend the event includes a representative from the mainstream conservative party — Jürgen Hardt of the CDU/CSU, which leads in the polls for Germany’s coming election. But a member of the Alternative for Germany, or AfD, parts of which are classified as right-extremist by the German government, is also expected to be there.
The AfD representative will be Tino Chrupalla, its co-leader, rather than Alice Weidel, its chancellor candidate in the February election. Elon Musk, Mr. Trump’s billionaire ally, recently hosted a friendly interview with Ms. Weidel on his X social network, giving the AfD a platform that German media and politicians have long denied it. Mr. Musk has endorsed Ms. Weidel in the election.
Among the expected high-profile British guests are former Prime Minister Liz Truss, who resigned after less than two months in office over a budget plan that rattled financial markets, and Nigel Farage, who leads the country’s insurgent, populist and anti-immigrant party, Reform U.K.
Mr. Farage is a longtime ally of the president-elect, and backed his campaigns for the White House in 2016 and 2020 as well as last year.
While in Washington, Mr. Farage may have the chance to try to repair his ties with Mr. Musk, who had been a supporter but recently turned on Mr. Farage. The spat started over Mr. Farage’s refusal to echo Mr. Musk’s demand that a far-right agitator with multiple criminal convictions be released from prison.
Politics
Cause of death confirmed for Mitt Romney’s sister-in-law
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The death of former Sen. Mitt Romney’s sister-in-law has been confirmed to be a suicide, the Los Angeles County medical examiner’s office announced Tuesday.
Carrie Elizabeth Romney, 64, died of “blunt traumatic injuries” after plunging from a five-story parking garage in California in early October. She had been married to Mitt Romney’s older brother, George Scott Romney, 81, and the pair had been going through a months-long divorce.
“Our family is heartbroken by the loss of Carrie, who brought warmth and love to all our lives,” Mitt Romney said in a statement after Carrie’s death.
FETTERMAN’S BRUTALLY CANDID ACCOUNT OF BATTLING DEPRESSION, FEELING SUICIDAL, BEING THROWN OUT OF HIS HOUSE
Sen. Mitt Romney’s sister-in-law died in October. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
“We ask for privacy during this difficult time,” he added.
Carrie and George had been married since 2016. They had been separated since late May, and George filed a divorce petition in early June.
FLASHBACK: MITT ROMNEY MOCKED IN 2012 FOR SELF-DEPORTATION CONCEPT THAT HAS NOW BECOME A REALITY
George Scott Romney stands during the Pledge of Allegiance during the final day of the Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on August 30, 2012 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Mitt Romney served as a Utah senator until 2024, when he decided not to run for re-election.
“I have spent my last 25 years in public service of one kind or another. At the end of another term, I’d be in my mid-eighties. Frankly, it’s time for a new generation of leaders. They’re the ones that need to make the decisions that will shape the world they will be living in,” Romney said at the time.
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“We face critical challenges — mounting national debt, climate change, and the ambitious authoritarians of Russia and China. Neither President Biden nor former President Trump are leading their party to confront them,” Romney said.
“It is a profound honor to serve Utah and the nation, and I thank you for giving me the opportunity to do so.”
Politics
Supreme Court poised to strike down Watergate-era campaign finance limits
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court’s conservatives signaled Tuesday they are likely to rule for Republicans and President Trump by throwing out a Watergate-era limit on campaign funding by political parties.
The court has repeatedly said campaign money is protected as free speech, and the new ruling could allow parties to support their candidate’s campaigns with help from wealthy donors.
For the second day in a row, Trump administration lawyers urged the justices to strike down a law passed by Congress. And they appeared to have the support of most of the conservatives.
The only doubt arose over the question of whether the case was flawed because no current candidate was challenging the limits.
“The parties are very much weakened,” said Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh. “This court’s decisions over the years have together reduced the power of political parties, as compared to outside groups, with negative effects on our constitutional democracy.”
He was referring to rulings that upheld unlimited campaign spending by wealthy donors and so-called super PACs.
In the Citizens United case of 2010, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and four other conservatives struck down the long-standing limits on campaign spending, including by corporations and unions. They did so on the theory that such spending was “independent” of candidates and was protected as free speech under the 1st Amendment.
They said the limits on contributions to candidates were not affected. Those limits could be justified because the danger of corruption where money bought political favors. This triggered a new era of ever-larger political spending but most of it was separate from the candidates and the parties.
Last year, billionaire Elon Musk spent more than $250 million to support Donald Trump’s campaign for reelection. He did so with money spent through political action committees, not directly to Trump or his campaign.
Meanwhile the campaign funding laws limit contributions to candidates to $3,500.
Lawyers for the National Republican Senatorial Committee pointed out this trend and told the Supreme Court its decisions had “eroded” the basis for some of the remaining the 1970s limits on campaign funding.
At issue Tuesday were the limits on “coordinated party spending.” In the wake of the Watergate scandal, Congress added limits on campaign money that could be given to parties and used to fund their candidates. The current donation limit is $44,000, the lawyers said.
Washington attorney Noel Francisco, Trump’s solicitor general during his first term, urged the court strike down these limits on grounds they are outdated and violate the freedom of speech.
“The theory is that they’re needed to prevent an individual donor from laundering a $44,000 donation through the party to a particular candidate in exchange for official action,” he said.
If a big-money donor hopes to win a favor from a congressional candidate, the “would-be briber would be better off just giving a massive donation to the candidate’s favorite super PAC,” Francisco said.
The suit heard Tuesday was launched by then-Sen. JD Vance of Ohio and other Republican candidates, and it has continued in his role as vice president and possibly a presidential candidate in 2028.
Usually, the Justice Department defends federal laws, but in this instance, the Trump administration switched sides and joined the Republicans calling for the party spending limits to be struck down.
Precedents might have stood in the way.
In 2001, the Supreme Court had narrowly upheld these limits on the grounds that the party’s direct support was like a contribution, not independent spending. But the deputy solicitor general, Sarah Harris, told the justices Tuesday that the court’s recent decisions have “demolished” that precedent.
“Parties can’t corrupt candidates, and no evidence suggests donors launder bribes by co-opting parties’ coordinated spending with candidates,” she said.
Marc Elias, a Democratic attorney, joined the case in the support of the court limits. He said the outcome would have little to do with speech or campaign messages.
“I think we’re underselling the actual corruption” that could arise, he said. If an individual were to give $1 million to political party while that person has business matter before the House or Senate, he said, it’s plausible that could influence “a deciding or swing vote.”
The only apparent difficulty for the conservative justices arose over questions of procedure.
Washington attorney Roman Martinez was asked to defend the law, and he argued that neither Vance nor any other Republicans had legal standing to challenge the limits. Vance was not a current candidate, and he said the case should be dismissed for that reason.
Some legal observers noted that the limits on parties arose in response to evidence that huge campaign contributions to President Nixon’s reelection came from industry donors seeking government favors.
“Coordinated spending limits are one of the few remaining checks to curb the influence of wealthy special interests in our elections,” said Omar Noureldin, senior vice president for litigation at Common Cause. “If the Supreme Court dismantles them, party leaders and wealthy donors will be free to pour nearly unlimited money directly into federal campaigns, exactly the kind of corruption these rules were created to stop.”
Daniel I. Weiner, an elections law expert at the Brennan Center, said the justices were well aware of how striking down these limits could set the stage for further challenges.
“I was struck by how both sides had to acknowledge that this case has to be weighed not in isolation but as part of a decades-long push to strike down campaign finance rules,” he said. “Those other decisions have had many consequences the court itself failed to anticipate.”
Politics
Video: Trump Calls Europe ‘Decaying’ and ‘Weak’
new video loaded: Trump Calls Europe ‘Decaying’ and ‘Weak’
transcript
transcript
Trump Calls Europe ‘Decaying’ and ‘Weak’
President Trump criticized his European counterparts over their defense and Ukraine policies during an interview with Politico. The president also suggested that it was time for President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine to compromise in the cease-fire talks.
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“Europe is not doing a good job in many ways. They’re not doing a good job.” “I want to ask you about that—” “They talk too much, and they’re not producing. But most European nations, they’re decaying. They’re decaying.” “You can imagine some leaders in Europe are a little freaked out by what your posture is. And European —” “Well they should be freaked out by what they’re doing to their countries. They’re destroying their countries and their people I like.” “Russia has the upper hand, and they always did. They’re much bigger. They’re much stronger in that sense. I give Ukraine a lot of — I give the people of Ukraine and the military of Ukraine tremendous credit for the bravery and for the fighting and all of that. But at some point, size will win, generally.” “Is Zelensky responsible for the stalled progress or what’s going on there?” “Well, he’s got to read the proposal. He hadn’t really. He hasn’t read it yet.” “The most recent draft.” “That’s as of yesterday. Maybe he’s read it over the night. It would be nice if he would read it. A lot of people are dying. He’s going to have to get on the ball and start accepting things. When you’re losing, cause he’s losing.”
By Chevaz Clarke
December 9, 2025
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