Politics
U.S. and Allies Discuss Security of Ukraine’s Leaders Amid Fears for Zelensky’s Safety
WASHINGTON — Allied governments have been discussing how you can safe the road of succession in Ukraine within the occasion President Volodymyr Zelensky is captured or killed by Russian forces, in response to officers from a number of governments.
The issues are primarily about ensuring there may be nonetheless an impartial Ukrainian authorities in some kind, even when Russia finds a strategy to set up a puppet management in Kyiv, the capital. Having an impartial chief to acknowledge, Western officers stated, will assist stop any Russian-backed leaders from gaining legitimacy.
Mr. Zelensky’s presence and motivational speeches have been key elements in maintaining the morale of the Ukrainian navy and folks, and the officers stated it was essential that continued.
The deal with securing succession comes, partially, as a result of Ukraine’s Structure is unclear on the difficulty and since Mr. Zelensky has stated he doesn’t need to be evacuated. He memorably quipped “I would like ammunition, not a trip.” Regardless of information reviews, American officers deny they ever supplied to evacuate the president or suggested him to depart. And Western governments have applauded his resolve to remain and battle as Russian troops attempt to advance throughout the nation.
The USA, Britain and the European Union wouldn’t acknowledge a authorities arrange by Russia. Nonetheless, undermining a Moscow-controlled authorities in Kyiv shall be simpler for the USA and its allies if there’s a legally acknowledged chief of a free Ukraine, somewhat than competing politicians vying for that function.
Some sensible and authorized points are at play as properly. The European Union and NATO nations have been largely making their navy and financial donations public as a strategy to present assist for Ukraine. European nations have despatched computerized weapons, Stinger antiaircraft weapons, numerous anti-tank missiles and protecting gear to exhibit that allies are intent on bolstering Ukraine’s potential to wreck Russian navy forces.
Persevering with such public assist is way simpler with a useful authorities to simply accept the help, even whether it is working in western Ukraine or as a government-in-exile in Poland or Romania.
The USA has a protracted historical past of covertly offering arms to rebel teams all over the world. Such a program for Ukraine — which might require a proper however secret discovering from President Biden — stays a chance. However the longer the organized navy leads the battle towards Russia, the extra probably Ukraine will be capable of maintain management of all or a part of the nation.
Over the past week, intense discussions within the White Home and in closed-door conferences on Capitol Hill have targeted on how you can present help to Ukraine ought to Russia take over the capital. In that scenario, the administration presently plans to proceed overtly supplying weaponry to the Ukrainians.
The robust public sign of assist, against secret weapons applications, ought to assist strengthen Ukraine’s morale and exhibit to Russia that the availability of weapons to the Ukrainian navy was not going to cease, in response to an individual briefed on the dialogue, who like others interviewed for this text spoke on the situation of anonymity to debate delicate conversations with the Ukrainian authorities.
American officers have pushed the Ukrainians to not permit senior officers within the line of succession to stay in the identical place for lengthy durations, and have additionally urged that they be moved to safer areas exterior Kyiv, stated an individual briefed on the conversations.
U.S. and allied officers would love the Ukrainian authorities to arrange a location for the management to make use of ought to Kyiv fall, in response to a number of officers. A presidential retreat within the Carpathian Mountains in western Ukraine might presumably be used, however Ukrainian officers haven’t stated if the ability is outfitted with bomb shelters and hardened communications capabilities.
Below the Ukrainian Structure, the speaker, or chairperson, of Parliament would succeed Mr. Zelensky as appearing president. The present speaker, Ruslan Stefanchuk, is a pro-Western politician and former high aide to Mr. Zelensky. On Monday, Mr. Stefanchuk was pictured with Mr. Zelensky signing Ukraine’s utility for European Union membership. And on Friday, he participated in a digital assembly with the president of the European Parliament.
U.S. and European officers stated Mr. Stefanchuk and others within the line of succession had been anticipated to proceed to oppose the Russian invasion.
Ukrainian officers have resisted ideas from U.S. and European officers to relocate Mr. Stefanchuk however have stated they perceive the necessity to guarantee a authorized succession, in response to two individuals briefed on the conversations.
On Thursday, Mr. Zelensky held a information convention in a room the place sandbags had been stacked towards the home windows for defense. Whereas he didn’t speak about succession, he did increase the potential for dying.
Ukrainian officers have publicly stated they don’t seem to be desirous about discussing succession and are targeted on preventing, and successful, the conflict. Maryan Zablotskyy, a member of Parliament who’s in Mr. Zelensky’s social gathering, stated in an interview he had heard no discussions on the succession concern.
The method earlier than the invasion, when Ukrainian officers had been publicly skeptical that Russia would assault, has rapidly given strategy to a extra cleareyed view of the scenario. The Ukrainians are actually able to make wartime calls, say individuals briefed on the conversations.
For weeks forward of the invasion, the USA and Britain warned about Moscow’s want to push Mr. Zelensky from energy. They mentioned how succession in Ukraine would work in the event that they wanted to counter a Russia-backed coup.
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And regardless of the general public rhetoric forward of the invasion that the USA was overstating the menace, Mr. Zelensky privately took the warning extra severely and realized the Russians had been intent on capturing or killing him, in response to American officers.
Throughout a go to to Kyiv in January, William J. Burns, the C.I.A. director, mentioned the intelligence in regards to the menace to Ukraine with Mr. Zelensky, in response to an individual briefed on the assembly. When Mr. Zelensky raised the difficulty of his household’s security, Mr. Burns replied that he wanted to take each the threats to Ukraine and to himself severely.
Because the invasion started in earnest, Russian officers have made plain that their intention is to push out the present authorities in Ukraine and set up one pleasant to Moscow. The State Division accused Russia of growing lists of Ukrainian politicians to arrest and seize as their forces moved ahead.
“The significance of Zelensky’s character underneath present circumstances is past doubt,” stated Khrystyna Holynska, a Ukrainian who co-wrote a latest essay in The Hill newspaper in regards to the succession points. “If one thing occurs to him, it might be essential to ship a crystal clear message about who’s main the nation now, how the federal government shall be run.”
Ms. Holynska, a researcher on the RAND Company, stated whereas it won’t be clever for Ukraine to publicize plans to relocate the federal government, she hoped it was able to function in areas exterior Kyiv.
Past Mr. Stefanchuk, the speaker of Ukraine’s Parliament, the road of succession is just not solely clear, stated Ms. Holynska. When Mr. Zelensky and Mr. Stefanchuk grew to become sick with Covid in 2020, Ukrainian authorized students stated the prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, could be third in line to take over.
The Ukrainian Structure creates the positions of first deputy and deputy chairperson to take over the duties of the parliament speaker, although it doesn’t explicitly say they’re in a line of presidential succession.
“Individuals ought to know who’s subsequent in line,” Ms. Holynska stated. “Proper now could be very Zelensky targeted. He’s within the information, he’s in every single place. Shedding this picture of a frontrunner shall be not good for the resistance, for the desire to battle, for the spirit in Ukraine.”
Andrew E. Kramer contributed reporting from Kyiv, Ukraine, and Safak Timur from Istanbul.
Politics
Homan taking death threats against him ‘more seriously’ after Trump officials targeted with violent threats
Incoming Trump border czar Tom Homan reacted to news of death threats against Trump nominees on Wednesday and said he now takes the death threats he has previously received seriously.
“I have not taken this serious up to this point,” Homan told Fox News anchor Gillian Turner on “The Story” on Wednesday, referring to previous death threats made against him and his family.
“Now that I know what’s happened in the last 24 hours. I will take it a little more serious. But look, I’ve been dealing with this. When I was the ICE director in the first administration, I had numerous death threats. I had a security detail with me all the time. Even after I retired, death threats continued and even after I retired as the ICE Director. I had U.S. Marshals protection for a long time to protect me and my family.”
Homan explained that what “doesn’t help” the situation is the “negative press” around Trump.
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“I’m not in the cabinet, but, you know, I’ve read numerous hit pieces. I mean, you know, I’m a racist and, you know, I’m the father of family separation, all this other stuff. So the hate media doesn’t help at all because there are some nuts out there. They’ll take advantage. So that doesn’t help.”
Homan’s comments come shortly after Fox News Digital first reported that nearly a dozen of President-elect Donald Trump’s cabinet nominees and other appointees tapped for the incoming administration were targeted Tuesday night with “violent, unAmerican threats to their lives and those who live with them,” prompting a “swift” law enforcement response.
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The “attacks ranged from bomb threats to ‘swatting,’” according to Trump-Vance transition spokeswoman and incoming White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
“Last night and this morning, several of President Trump’s Cabinet nominees and administration appointees were targeted in violent, unAmerican threats to their lives and those who live with them,” she told Fox News Digital on Wednesday. “In response, law enforcement acted quickly to ensure the safety of those who were targeted. President Trump and the entire Transition team are grateful for their swift action.”
Sources told Fox News Digital that John Ratcliffe, the nominee to be CIA director, Pete Hegseth, the nominee for secretary of defense, and Rep. Elise Stefanik, the nominee for UN ambassador, were among those targeted. Brooke Rollins, who Trump has tapped to be secretary of agriculture, and Lee Zeldin, Trump’s nominee to be EPA administrator, separately revealed they were also targeted.
Threats were also made against Trump’s Labor Secretary nominee, GOP Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer, and former Trump attorney general nominee Matt Gaetz’s family.
Homan told Fox News that he is “not going to be intimidated by these people” and “I’m not going to let them silence me.”
“What I’ve learned today I’ll start taking a little more serious.”
Homan added that he believes “we need to have a strong response once we find out is behind all this.”
“It’s illegal to threaten someone’s life. And we need to follow through with that.”
The threats on Tuesday night came mere months after Trump survived two assassination attempts.
Fox News Digital’s Brooke Singman contributed to this report
Politics
Democrat Derek Tran ousts Republican Michelle Steel in competitive Orange County House race
In a major victory for Democrats, first-time candidate Derek Tran defeated Republican Rep. Michelle Steel in a hotly contested Orange County congressional race that became one of the most expensive in the country.
Tran will be the first Vietnamese American to represent a district that is home to Little Saigon and the largest population of people of Vietnamese descent outside of Vietnam.
The race was the third-to-last to be called in the country. As Orange County and Los Angeles County counted mail ballots, Steel’s margin of victory shrank to 58 votes before Tran took the lead 11 days after the election. Tran was leading by 613 votes when Steel conceded Wednesday.
Tran was born in the U.S. to Vietnamese refugee parents. He said his father fled Vietnam after the fall of Saigon, but his boat capsized, killing his wife and children. Tran’s father returned to Vietnam, where he met and married Tran’s mother, and the couple later immigrated to the United States.
“Only in America can you go from refugees fleeing with nothing but the clothes on your back to becoming a member of Congress in just one generation,” Tran said in a post on X.
“This victory is a testament to the spirit and resilience of our community,” he said. “My parents came to this country to escape oppression and pursue the American Dream, and their story reflects the journey of so many here in Southern California.”
In a statement Wednesday, Steel thanked her volunteers, staff and family for their work on her campaign, saying: “Everything is God’s will and, like all journeys, this one is ending for a new one to begin.” Steel filed paperwork Monday to seek re-election in 2026.
The 45th District was among the country’s most competitive races, critical to both parties as they battled to control the House of Representatives.
With Steel’s loss, Republicans hold 219 seats in the House, barely above the 218-seat threshold needed to control the chamber.
Two races have yet to be called. A recount is underway in Iowa’s 1st Congressional District, where a Republican incumbent is leading her Democrat challenger by fewer than 800 votes. And in California’s agricultural San Joaquin Valley, Democrat Adam Gray holds a slender lead over GOP Rep. John Duarte, but the race remains too close to call.
Steel and Tran both focused heavily on outreach to Asian American voters, who make up a plurality of the district. The district cuts a C-shaped swath through 17 cities in Orange County and Los Angeles County, including Garden Grove, Westminster, Fountain Valley, Buena Park and Cerritos.
Born to South Korean parents and raised in Japan, Steel broke barriers in 2020 when she became one of three Korean American women elected to the House. She leaned on anti-communist messaging to reach out to older voters who fled Vietnam after the fall of Saigon in 1975.
Tran also focused on Vietnamese American voters and Vietnamese-language media, hoping that voters would leave their loyalty to the Republican Party in order to support a representative who shared their background.
Steel became a prime target for Democrats because, although she is a Republican, voters in the 45th District supported President Biden in 2020. The two-term congresswoman is a formidable fundraiser with deep ties to the Orange County GOP, including through her husband, Shawn Steel, the former chairman of the California Republican Party.
The Republican establishment and outside groups, including the cryptocurrency lobby and Elon Musk’s super PAC, spent heavily to defend Steel.
In a sign of the seat’s importance to Democrats, Gov. Gavin Newsom, former President Clinton and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) all joined Tran on the campaign trail in the weeks before the election.
The race was marked by allegations of “red baiting” after the Steel campaign sent Vietnamese-language mailers to households in Little Saigon that showed Tran next to the hammer-and-sickle emblem of the Chinese Communist Party and Mao Zedong.
Steel’s campaign said that the Tran campaign had been running Vietnamese-language ads on Facebook that accused Steel’s husband of “selling access” to the Chinese Communist Party and that said Steel could not be trusted to stand up to China.
Tran’s win is a key victory for Democrats, who fought to flip five highly competitive seats held by Republicans in California — more than any other state. Republicans were pushing to flip a district in coastal Orange County represented by Rep. Katie Porter (D-Irvine).
Democrat Dave Min beat Republican Scott Baugh in the costly contest for Porter’s seat and Democrat George Whitesides flipped the district represented by Republican Rep. Mike Garcia in L.A. County’s Antelope Valley.
In the agricultural Central Valley, Republican Rep. David Valadao easily won reelection over Democrat Rudy Salas. The race in the San Joaquin Valley between Gray, the Democrat, and Rep. Duarte, who won two years ago by 564 votes, remained too close to be called.
Politics
Mississippi runoff election for state Supreme Court justice is too close to call
A runoff election for the state Supreme Court in Mississippi is too close to call between state Sen. Jenifer Branning and incumbent Justice Jim Kitchens as of Wednesday morning.
Although Mississippi judicial candidates run without party labels, Branning had the endorsement of the Republican Party, while Kitchens had several Democratic Party donors but did not receive an endorsement from the party.
Branning, who has been a state senator since 2016, led Kitchens by 2,678 votes out of 120,610 votes counted as of Wednesday morning. Kitchens is seeking a third term and is the more senior of the court’s two presiding justices, putting him next in line to serve as chief justice. Her lead had been 518 just after midnight Wednesday.
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Around midnight Wednesday, The Associated Press estimated there were more than 11,000 votes still to be counted. In the Nov. 5 election, 7% of votes were counted after election night.
Branning had a substantial lead in the first round of voting with 42% compared to Kitchens’ 36%. Three other candidates split the rest.
The victor will likely be decided by absentee ballots that are allowed to be counted for five days following an election in Mississippi, as well as the affidavit ballots, according to the Clarion Ledger.
Voter turnout typically decreases between general elections and runoffs, and campaigns said turnout was especially challenging two days before Thanksgiving. The Magnolia State voted emphatically for President-elect Donald Trump, who garnered 61.6% of the vote compared to Vice President Harris’ 37.3%.
Branning and Kitchens faced off in District 1, also known as the Central District, which stretches from the Delta region through the Jackson metro area and over to the Alabama border.
Branning calls herself a “constitutional conservative” and says she opposes “liberal, activists judges” and “the radical left.” The Mississippi GOP said she was the “proven conservative,” and that was why they endorsed her.
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She has not previously held a judicial office but served as a special prosecutor in Neshoba County and as a staff attorney in the Mississippi Secretary of State’s Division of Business Services and Regulations, per the Clarion Ledger.
Branning voted against changing the state flag to remove the Confederate battle emblem and supported mandatory and increased minimum sentences for crime, according to Mississippi Today.
Kitchens has been practicing law for 41 years and has been on the Mississippi Supreme Court since 2008, and prior to that, he also served as a district attorney, according to the outlet.
He is endorsed by the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Action Fund, which calls itself “a catalyst for racial justice in the South and beyond.” Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., also backed Kitchens.
In September, Kitchens sided with a man on death row for a murder conviction in which a key witness recanted her testimony. In 2018, Kitchens dissented in a pair of death row cases dealing with the use of the drug midazolam in state executions.
Elsewhere, in the state’s other runoff election, Amy St. Pe’ won an open seat on the Mississippi Court of Appeals. She will succeed Judge Joel Smith, who did not seek re-election to the 10-member Court of Appeals. The district is in the southeastern corner of the state, including the Gulf Coast.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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