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Ilhan Omar names Democrats’ price to save Kevin McCarthy as shutdown looms

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Representative Ilhan Omar laid out on Friday what Democrats would require of their GOP counterparts to save Kevin McCarthy‘s speakership as a government shutdown looms.

Congress faces an end-of-the-day deadline to pass legislation that would fund the federal government through the next fiscal year to avert a government shutdown, which would have wide-ranging effects for millions of Americans, including the hundreds of thousands of federal employees who would be furloughed. House Speaker McCarthy has struggled to strike a deal that would both appease the GOP conference’s most conservative members—who have threatened to file a motion to vacate his speakership if he strikes a deal with Democrats—while also passing the Senate, increasing the likelihood of a shutdown.

Republicans’ legislative showdown has fueled questions about whether Democrats could potentially leverage the shutdown threat to secure concessions from McCarthy in bipartisan appropriations legislation, in exchange for helping protect the California Republican’s position if conservative hardliners file a threat to his speakership.

Omar, a Minnesota Democrat who serves as the deputy chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said Democrats would likely push for a power-sharing agreement with McCarthy in exchange for bailing him out during an appearance on MSNBC‘s Alex Wagner Tonight on Friday.

Omar said she has spoken to some of the Democrats who may be more open to striking a bipartisan deal to save McCarthy, but they have indicated they would need a 50-50 power-sharing agreement to reach a deal.

Such an agreement would entail Democrats holding 50 percent of House committees and a shared agreement on legislation brought to a vote, Omar said.

“They’re not interested in saving a speaker who has made it his mission to take autonomy away from women by banning abortion, who has started the effort to cut social security, who is so pathetic that he’s willing to get 80 percent from heat assistance to so many people who rely [on it], especially Minnesotans, knowing that winter is coming,” the congresswoman said.

She continued: “This is a man who really doesn’t care about his constituents. The only thing he cares about is satisfying Marjorie Taylor Greene and the crazies in his caucus, and not about his constituents and the American people. I don’t think there’s going to be a single Democrat, unless this man makes an agreement, that we know we can fulfill, to let us cogovern with him.”

Newsweek reached out to Omar’s office for further comment via email.

Congress Scrambles to Fund Government

Congress’ scramble to pass legislation to fund the government continued into Saturday afternoon, as it was left with less than 12 hours until the shutdown would begin.

McCarthy announced that he would instead turn to a continuing resolution (CR) that would keep the government open, funding it at similar levels over 45 days. But it remained unclear whether that bill had enough support to pass as Democrats raised concerns about the bill, and conservatives have voiced opposition to a short-term funding bill.

Representative Katherine Clark, a Massachusetts Democrat, filed a motion to adjourn Congress, saying that Democrats wanted 90 minutes to read over the bill to ensure it is “clean,” but that request was allegedly denied.

McCarthy wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, that a bipartisan Senate bill “has no path forward and is dead on arrival” on Friday night. He told CNN that he would probably be able to pass a clean CR without additional funding for Ukraine, a key sticking point for conservatives who have opposed military aid for the war-torn country amid Russia’s invasion.

Twenty-one Republicans joined Democrats in voting down a short-term funding bill on Friday.

Congressman pulls fire alarm amid funding mayhem: What we know

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Representative Jamaal Bowman pulled a fire alarm at the Cannon building in Washington, D.C., on Saturday as lawmakers sought to reach an agreement to fund the federal government in order to avert a shutdown, according to House Republicans.

Congress scrambled to pass legislation to fund the federal government on Saturday afternoon, ultimately passing a bipartisan short-term spending bill that will keep federal funding at its current levels for 45 days, and awaits a vote in the Senate. The voting mayhem follows weeks of fears that Congress would be unable to reach a deal by the end of September—and less than 10 hours until the government was set to shut down.

Amid the chaos, a fire alarm went off at the Cannon building, which houses congressional offices, according to a statement from Representative Bryan Steil, a Wisconsin Republican who chairs the House Administration committee.

In his statement, Steil wrote that Bowman—a Democrat who represents New York’s 16th Congressional District, containing parts of the Bronx and New York City’s northern suburbs—pulled the alarm, but did not go into further detail in the initial statement.

“Rep Jamaal Bowman pulled a fire alarm in Cannon this morning. An investigation into why it was pulled is underway,” he wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

A Capitol Police department spokesperson wrote in a statement to Newsweek, “Today at 12:05 p.m., a fire alarm was activated on the 2nd floor of the Cannon House Office Building. The building was evacuated while USCP officers checked the building. The building was reopened after it was determined that there was not a threat. An investigation into what happened and why continues.”

In addition, Bowman’s press secretary Emma Simon responded to the investigation in a statement to Newsweek on Saturday afternoon.

“Congressman Bowman did not realize he would trigger a building alarm as he was rushing to make an urgent vote. The Congressman regrets any confusion,” Simon wrote.

Bowman also told reporters that he believed the alarm would open the door, Axios journalist Juliegrace Brufke reported.

Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, posted a video to X showing the fire alarm going off inside the building.

Capitol police have also released an image appearing to show Bowman standing near the fire alarm, according to Punchbowl News co-founder Jake Sherman.

“Capitol Police are circulating this photo of a man pulling the fire alarm in Cannon. Looks a lot like Jamaal Bowman,” he wrote.

Bowman pulling the fire alarm sparked outrage from conservatives, who said that pulling the alarm constitutes the crime of disrupting an official proceeding and that he should face consequences for doing so.

Representative Nicole Malliotakis, a New York Republican, was drafting a resolution to have him expelled, while Representative Lisa McClain, a Michigan Republican, was planning to introduce a resolution to censure him, reported Politico’s Olivia Beavers.

“This is the United States Congress, not a New York City high school. To pull the fire alarm to disrupt proceedings when we are trying to draft legislation to AVERT A SHUTDOWN is pathetic…even for members of the socialist squad,” Malliotakis wrote on X.

Greene wrote in another post to X: “Democrat Rep. Jamaal Bowman pulled the fire alarm in the Cannon building this afternoon and interrupted the official proceedings of the House as Republicans worked to keep the government open. I’m calling on the DOJ to prosecute him using the same law they used to prosecute J6 defendants for interfering with an official proceeding.”

In addition, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy called the congressman’s actions a “new low.”

“We watched how people have been treated if they’ve done something wrong in this Capitol. It will be interesting to see how he was treated, on what he was trying to obstruct when it came to the American public,” he said in a press conference Saturday afternoon.

Russian official calls for Ukrainians’ "genocide", creating patriot "camps"

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A Russian ultra-nationalist and former political figure has said that Moscow must destroy Ukrainians and put them in re-education camps.

Pavel Gubarev made the comments during an interview posted by journalist and Russia watcher Julia Davis on X (formerly Twitter). It started with a question about Moscow’s failure to take Kyiv in the early stages of Vladimir Putin‘s full-scale invasion.

The clip was also shared on the X account of Ukrainian internal affairs adviser Anton Gerashchenko. It has the watermark of Knizhni Mir, a publishing house in St. Petersburg, Russia, where Gubarev gave a talk on September 24.

Gubarev is a Ukrainian-born Russian political figure and soldier who was prominent in Ukraine’s Donbas region in 2014. That year, he proclaimed himself the “people’s governor” of Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk oblast, before being sidelined by other separatist leaders.

In May 2023, Gubarev became one of the leaders of the Russian pro-war ultranationalist group, the Club of Angry Patriots, which has called for the country to go on a full war footing to win in Ukraine. He protested against the arrest of another of the group’s key figures, Igor Girkin (Strelkov), who was detained after he repeatedly criticized Russia’s military leadership.

In the interview, Gubarev said Russia had failed to appraise correctly the level of training that Ukrainian troops had undertaken since 2014 and that there had been Russian intelligence shortcomings.

Gubarev added that Russian troops, which numbered around 25,000, were forced to leave Kyiv. They were insufficient to take a large metropolitan area such as the Ukrainian capital and that front units got bogged down and the equipment was below-par.

“There was no communication” and the new technologies connecting drones and artillery, which had been effective in the Donbas region for Ukrainian and Donetsk forces, “turned out to be a novelty for Russia’s armed forces.”

Gubarev said that, facing colossal losses, it was logical for Russian forces to retreat from Kyiv, “unlike the Kharkiv catastrophe.” This refers to the retreat from the eastern Ukrainian oblast in September 2022.

“We don’t have much of a choice; we can either win or lose. There can be some tactical peace deal, but there is no way to bring peace to this situation,” Gubarev added.

He said that Russian forces had entered a “conflict of annihilation” and that “it’s either us or them,” before repeating a quote that he had given in a previous interview that Moscow would win and “will destroy 1, 2, 3 or 5 million Ukrainians.”

“It’s not based on me being bloodthirsty; it’s just a fact,” Gubarev said. “We either have to win or lose,” and losing would mean “the decolonization of Russia.”

Gubarev described the Ukrainian army as one of the strongest armies in the world, and that they were brave, although he said that they were “no different from us,” repeating the idea pushed by nationalists that Ukraine is not a separate nation.

“But they are infected with the virus of anti-Russianness,” Gubarev said. “I don’t know how we can live together after our victory, short of cutting them all out, carrying out genocide on them all.

“We will have to re-educate them. We will have to drag some of them through camps,” Gubarev added. “Some will have to be persuaded not just with words.”

The comments provoked a strong reaction online. Gerashchenko said they showed how Gubarev “openly calls for genocide.”

“An absolute masterpiece in the expression of the fascist mentality,” wrote one user in the comments under the clip posted on underneath the video on Davis’s YouTube Channel, Russian Media Monitor. “I think it is the most bone-chilling interview I have watched during the entire war.”

“The calmness he speaks of the necessity of genocide is chilling,” posted another user.

Newsweek has contacted the Russian Defense Ministry by email for comment.

Donald Trump mimicking Biden getting lost on stage sparks MAGA delight

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Video of Donald Trump poking fun at President Joe Biden, which prompted laughter from the audience at a Republican event, has generated further mockery online.

During the California GOP convention in Anaheim, the former president mimicked the viral moment that showed Biden’s actions after delivering a speech.

Footage appeared to show the president getting lost on stage in September 2022 at the Global Fund Conference in New York. He lingered on the stage after stepping away from the podium and then turned around when he heard his name. On Friday, Trump referred to the moment during his address to GOP party faithful, telling them about “the guy can’t find his way off of a stage.”

Trump then turned around and tried to reenact Biden’s actions by walking around aimlessly. “Look here’s a stage,’ the Republican said. ‘I’ve never seen this stupid stage before. I’ve never seen it before. But if I walk left, there’s a stair. And if I walk right, there’s a stair.”

To laughter in the room, Trump added, “and this guy gets up, (as if to say) ‘where am I? Where the hell am I?'”

Social-media users shared the video, which, as of Saturday, had received more than 4 million views. The user Richard, @ricwe123 on X (formerly Twitter), posted to his 71,000 followers: “Painful accurate. Donald Trump imitating Joe Biden getting lost on stage….”

Conservative political commentator Benny Johnson shared the same video, posting: “Trump imitating Biden getting lost on stage is hilarious.”

“Hahahahahahahaha: Trump imitating Biden getting lost on stage multiple times. WATCH,” wrote Simon Ateba, White House correspondent for Today News Africa.

British journalist and broadcaster Piers Morgan did not mock Biden, but in sharing the video, wrote: “Painfully accurate. If Biden insists on taking on Trump again (assuming Trump is GOP nominee)—he will lose.”

When the clip of Biden went viral, commentators, and social-media users questioned the 80-year-old’s cognitive abilities. The president’s health is under constant scrutiny, although the White House says Biden is fit to lead the country.

However, as a Newsweek Factcheck previously reported, the video of Biden needs context. While a shortened clip appears to show him walking uncertainly, a longer video shows how, after leaving the podium, he becomes aware that he was going to be needed moments later for a picture on stage and so stayed on the platform.

Trump referred to the incident as a sign that that Biden won’t be the 2024 Democratic nominee, although the incumbent is running virtually unopposed in the primary.

Trump, whose own campaign is complicated by legal problems, said that leading the pack to replace Biden would be the Golden State Governor Gavin Newsom. Trump described the Californian as the president’s “top surrogate because he doesn’t think Biden is going to make it.”

“There will be a lot of Democrats competing; it’s going to be very interesting,” added Trump.

Newsweek has contacted the White House for comment via email.

Russian soldier shares video of HIMARS strike aftermath

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A Russian soldier has posted a video of what he said showed the burnt remains of a Ukrainian HIMARS (High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems) strike on the self-propelled artillery systems of Vladimir Putin‘s troops.

Anton Gerashchenko, a Ukrainian internal affairs adviser, posted on X (formerly Twitter) the soldier’s footage about the fate of two Russian 2S9 Nona-S self-propelled guns that had been destroyed in Makiivka, in the Donetsk oblast.

The two-minute, 49-second clip shows an unnamed soldier addressing a camera he is holding as he walks along and talks about a Ukrainian missile strike on the Nona systems, which have played a key role for both sides in the war. The video has not been independently verified, and Newsweek has contacted the Russian Defense Ministry by email for comment.

Interspersed with drone footage by Ukraine’s forces of the strikes on the systems, the soldier said how “this is the area where the crew died.”

“You can see the damage here; the metal’s melted,” he said, pointing to the destroyed remnants of the artillery system and a large crater. “No one was left alive.” Regarding the deaths, he said, “it’s war, it can’t be helped,” adding that there would be eternal memory for his killed comrades.

The soldier showed off the remains of the second Nona system and described how Ukrainian footage showed the crew jumping into the air after the strike.

“They were spotted,” the soldier said. “That’s why you can’t leave equipment out in open places like this—not with a full crew.”

He then pointed to a deep hole and shrapnel left by the HIMARS strike, as well as the remains of a turret that had flown into the air upon impact.

Ukraine’s armed forces have previously released footage of HIMARS strikes on the Nona-S mortar carriers. As of Saturday, Russian forces had lost 38 of them since the start of the war. This is according to Oryx, a website which counts equipment losses of both sides using open sources.

The U.S.-supplied HIMARS have given Ukraine extra capability on the battlefield, and this week, Kyiv released footage appearing to show their use in a strike on a Russian “command center” in the occupied southern Kherson region.

As Ukraine steps up its longer-range strikes on Russian targets, the U.S. has agreed to supply Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS). These have a range close to 200 miles and could Kyiv greater capability to strike far behind enemy lines in the south and the east, including Crimea.

Wagner fighters think Putin appointee is a "traitor"—UK

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Wagner Group fighters believe that one of its former commanders now tasked with providing troops for Ukraine is a “traitor”, according to British defense officials.

Russian authorities released footage on Friday of Putin meeting the former Wagner chief-of-staff and retired colonel Andrey Troshev. The president said he will oversee and establish new volunteer fighting units to perform combat missions primarily in Ukraine.

There has been uncertainty over Wagner’s future following the death in a plane crash in August of its founder, Yevgeny Prigozhin. This came two months after he challenged the Russian defense establishment on June 24 when he seized military facilities in Rostov-on-Don and his private military company (PMC) members marched on Moscow.

Wagner had been key to Russia’s efforts in the Donetsk city of Bakhmut and offers security to countries in Africa where the group gives the Kremlin access to valuable resources.

Wagner-affiliated sources said that Troshev had left the PMC after the rebellion and had been working for the Russian Ministry of Defense-affiliated Redut PMC.

British defense officials said on Saturday that Troshev was likely to have been involved in encouraging Wagner troops to sign defense ministry contracts, a move among the reasons that led to the mercenaries’ mutiny.

However, “many Wagner veterans likely consider him a traitor,” the British Ministry of Defense said.

It noted how Putin’s endorsement of Troshev and Deputy Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, who has been shown touring Africa where Wagner has a big presence, showed that Russia would continue to use volunteer units and private military companies, and was “planning for the future of Wagner.” Newsweek has emailed the Russian Defense Ministry for comment.

British defense officials said on Thursday that hundreds of former Wagner fighters were in demand and had returned to Ukraine recently with PMCs or regular Russian forces.

Meanwhile, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) said on Friday that Putin’s comments during his meeting with Troshev that he maintains relationships with his former comrades was a further suggestion that the Russian Ministry of Defense “seeks to leverage Troshev’s connections to Wagner.”

The think tank said that there were increasing reports that Wagner troops were operating alongside the internal security force Rosgvardia.

The ISW added that a Wagner commander is said to be negotiating for the mercenaries to join volunteer formations under Rosgvardia on terms more favorable to the PMC.

However, Putin’s backing of the Russian Ministry of Defense effort “does not portend a significant redeployment of Wagner personnel to Ukraine,” the think tank said.

“The piecemeal deployment of former Wagner personnel to any areas of the frontline is unlikely to generate any significant strategic or even localized effects on the battlefield,” the ISW added.

Ozempic gave me an excruciating side effect

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My story with Ozempic is worse than others. I’m a professor in Texas with an MD from Mexico, and I’ve had type 2 diabetes for more than 20 years. I used metformin for the last two decades and I experienced some gastrointestinal side effects.

The main reason why I started injecting Ozempic in April 2023 was because it was only a once-a-week injection, and I was tired of taking a lot of medications twice a day for so long.

I was also excited to start with Ozempic because I wanted to use fewer drugs; I didn’t want to have to take a medication multiple times a day.

My glucose level was great after taking Ozempic for the first week. I also suffered mild depression when I started with Ozempic, though it disappeared after one week.

But immediately after, I noticed a severe, burning pain in my back, shoulders, and arms. I was in excruciating pain. I had COVID before that, so I thought it was post-COVID neuropathy pain.

The burning pain in the back never disappeared. But in August, a worse burning pain in my genital area and buttocks appeared.

I noticed “pieces” of skin on my toilet seat and on the tissue paper when I cleaned the area. I checked, and my genitals, anus, and buttocks were severely burned, some areas with charred skin. It was as if I was exposed to sunlight for days.

The pain was so intense that I called my doctor. He immediately told me to discontinue Ozempic, and he told me it may have caused this issue, as one of the less talked about side effects is rashes, itching, or hives.

I panicked because I knew that these adverse effects were not normal.

I called the Ozempic 1-800 number and reported the issue, and I also reported it to the FDA. I researched on the internet and found that Ozempic can indeed cause hives, rashes, and other adverse effects.

After 20 days, I discontinued the medication and I noticed that I started to heal. I still feel a burning sensation in my back, but it’s not as bad as before. My friends and family are so worried and scared about the use of Ozempic.

The last time I injected myself was on September 5. The area is healing, but it still hurts when I have to urinate or defecate, and it often starts peeling again because of the friction.

I’m on a very strict diet and not taking any medication at this moment in time, but this will change in a few weeks. I want to heal before I start again with any medication, and due to the strict diet, my level of glucose is thankfully under control.

Ozempic helped me but I thought I was going to die at one point, because of what was happening to my body.

It was very good for my glucose levels, but I still don’t recommend the use of Ozempic because it has so many adverse effects that worried me and my family.

Dr. Maria E. Rosas is a college professor.

All views expressed in this article are the author’s own.

Do you have a unique experience or personal story to share? Email the My Turn team at myturn@newsweek.com.

Russia’s gas production collapses to late-stage USSR levels

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Russian gas production so far this year has slumped to levels not seen since the 1970s.

The country’s state energy giant Gazprom said in its latest report that gas production in the first half of 2023 was 179.45 billion cubic meters (bcm). Gazprom added that this represents a year-on-year decrease of nearly a quarter (24.7 percent), and a 26.5 percent drop in gas supplies to the domestic and foreign markets.

Since Vladimir Putin‘s full-scale invasion of Ukraine started on February 24, 2022, sanctions have sought to isolate Russia from the global economy, cutting it off from the SWIFT international banking system and freezing some of its foreign exchange reserves.

The invasion also pushed Europe to cut purchases of Russian oil and gas drastically. The continent overcame an energy crunch last winter, in part by reducing energy consumption and finding other suppliers, such as sellers of seaborne liquefied natural gas (LNG).

The Gazprom report said that the West had contributed to the decrease of the fuel and added that “the adoption in a number of countries of politically motivated decisions aimed at abandoning the import of Russian gas.”

Independent Russian-language news outlet Agentstvo reported that Gazprom “has never had such a low production rate in its entire history” and that “the last time there was similar figure was in the Soviet Union in 1978,” a year when 372.1 bcm were produced.

“Since then, the production of gas “has only grown,” reported Agentstvo. The outlet added how Soviet gas output also included fields in Ukraine and Uzbekistan. Newsweek has emailed Gazprom for further comment.

In February 2023, Putin accused the West of direct attempts to try to hinder and restrain Russia’s gas industry but added that Gazprom “is moving forward and launching new projects.”

Thomas O’Donnell, a Berlin-based geopolitical analyst, told Newsweek that Putin had cut gas flows, even before the attack in September 2022 on the Nord Stream pipelines between Russia and Germany—an act of sabotage that the Kremlin denies responsibility for and which is still being investigated.

“That aspect of Putin’s planned energy war has backfired. He prepped for a year before the invasion to keep EU storage empty and then have maximum blackmail leverage by selectively cutting and supplying to EU states—but it failed.”

O’Donnell said that the increase in supplies of US LNG helped by Norway and Qatar meant that “the EU didn’t have to cave in when Putin cut the gas flows.”

“So, that business is now lost to Putin,” O’Donnell said, although the EU will face higher prices of new global LNG coming online.

“For Moscow, without new, hugely expensive pipelines all the way to China, this huge Russian gas resource will remain a stranded asset,” added O’Donnell, a global fellow with the Wilson Center think tank.

Meanwhile, Gazprom’s report reinforces predictions by Russian state bank VEB, reported by Reuters in September, that Russia’s pipeline natural gas exports to the European Union may fall to 21 bcm, almost two-thirds lower than last year and a six-fold drop from 2021.

VEB said that Russian gas exports to Europe are expected to fall to 15 bcm in 2026. Russia is offering discounted energy exports to so-called “friendly” countries. However, VEB added that infrastructure constraints mean it would not be able to supply enough gas to Asia to make up for the shortfall.

Gazprom head Alexei Miller will join Putin during the Russian president’s visit next month to China to boost trade ties and offset losses of gas sales from the lucrative European market, Reuters reported.

Putin is scheduled to meet his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping for talks in Beijing where he will attend the third Belt and Road Forum which comes months after Xi’s high-profile visit to Moscow in March.

Trump tells Fox News to "get your act together before it is too late"

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Former President Donald Trump is lashing out at Fox News, warning the network to get its “act together before it is too late.”

Trump said that Fox “needs MAGA” in a fiery Truth Social post on Thursday night. The former president denounced the conservative news network for hosting Republican presidential primary debates in which he has refused to participate. Prior to the debates, Trump suggested that he would opt out because he was not receiving enough coverage from Fox.

The ex-president pointed out that the second GOP debate, which aired Wednesday night on Fox, had diminished ratings in his continued absence. Nielsen data indicates that fewer than 10 million households watched the second debate, down from the 12.8 million who tuned into the first debate last month, according to The New York Times.

“The second Republican Primary Debate on FoxNews had the Lowest Viewership since 2016,” Trump wrote. “Their overall Ratings are down 30%. FOX NEEDS MAGA, THEY JUST DON’T KNOW IT YET. STOP WITH THE BAD DEBATES & NEGATIVE ADS, NO MORE. GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE! DJT.”

In response to a request for comment, Fox News pointed Newsweek to a press release that touts the debate as the highest-rated program on television Wednesday night, despite the drop in ratings.

The press release states that “last night’s debate outpaced 60% of debates in the 2016 and 2020 cycle,” while Fox News President Jay Wallace suggested in an interview with Variety earlier this week that viewership would be less than the first debate.

Additionally, Newsweek previously reported that online streaming numbers suggested that Trump’s competing speech at a non-union auto parts manufacturer in Michigan had far less viewers than the debate.

Regardless of Trump’s disparaging post and his decision to decline joining the debate, the former president also indicated that he had watched the forum, sharing a “report card” on the performances of his rival candidates in a Truth Social post earlier on Thursday.

While Trump once had a seemingly cozy relationship with Fox News, he has repeatedly launched attacks during the 2024 election cycle, describing the network as “hostile” and at one point complaining about the airing of an unflattering photo.

Last month, Trump warned Fox that its “beautiful golden goose” would be “forever gone” it did not “get on board the greatest MOVEMENT of all time, MAGA.”

The ex-president’s focus on ratings was also evident when he falsely claimed that his online interview with former Fox host Tucker Carlson, which was released at the time of the first GOP debate, was “the single most watched video and interview in the history of the world.”

Trump claimed at the time that the interview had “262 million views and counting,” while data viewed by Newsweek showed that the video actually had 21.7 million views, including those that may not have been fully in frame or were as brief as two seconds.

Update 09/29/23, 4:16 p.m. ET: This article has been updated to add context on the press release Fox News provided to Newsweek.

Trump defendants may be scrambling to make a deal

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Former President Donald Trump‘s co-defendants in Georgia may be scrambling to make plea deals after bail bondsman Scott Hall became the first to strike an agreement with prosecutors.

Hall, 59, is among Trump’s 18 co-defendants in the 2020 presidential election subversion case in Fulton County. He agreed to testify in other proceedings and will receive five years’ probation after pleading guilty to five misdemeanors on Friday, having originally been charged with seven more serious crimes including racketeering and conspiracy to commit election fraud.

Legal experts have suggested that the agreement could prompt an avalanche of other co-defendants rushing to negotiate their own deals before Hall potentially testifies against them. Those accused of participating in the same scheme as Hall, a plot to illegally access voting machines in Coffee County, were viewed as particularly vulnerable.

“You can bet that at least 1/2 the defendants in Fulton County are right this second on the phones to their attorneys trying to suss out Hall’s deal and what they might be able to get if they come in quickly,” former federal prosecutor Harry Litman wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “It’s a particularly ominous situation for Sidney Powell, whose allegations also concern that episode.”

Litman went on to suggest that Hall’s agreement could set off a domino effect of other co-defendants feeling forced to take plea deals.

“Don’t want to get too far out front here, but if Hall can secure conviction of Powell, question becomes whose conviction can Powell secure?” wrote Litman. “And two names that jump to mind: Jenna Ellis and Rudy Giuliani. Again, this for now is just wild speculation.”

Joyce Vance, ex-U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Alabama, also suggested that former Trump lawyer Powell could soon feel the heat due to Hall’s agreement.

“A plea to 5 misdemeanors here signals that his cooperation is significant,” Vance posted. “Sidney Powell is one likely upstream defendant he could testify against on the Coffee County charges.”

During a court hearing earlier on Friday, prosecutors indicated that they may be preparing to offer plea agreements to Powell and her fellow former Trump lawyer Kenneth Chesebro, who’s accused of being the architect of the “fake electors” scheme.

Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner responded to the news by suggesting that testifying against Trump should be a “non-negotiable” condition of any plea agreement offered in the Georgia case.

“Plea offers that will REQUIRE full, accurate & truthful cooperation/testimony regarding their own crimes AND the crimes of others, I assume,” Kirschner posted on X. “Cooperating against Trump re: his democracy-busting crimes should be a non-negotiable condition of ANY plea offer to these defendants.”

Newsweek reached out for comment to Trump’s office via email on Friday.

Legal analyst Lisa Rubin suggested during an MSNBC appearance that Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis could soon set her sights on striking a deal with former Trump lawyer Ellis, arguing that she could become a “linchpin” witness for the prosecution.

“She feels abandoned by Trump world and is struggling with her legal bills, turning to a GoFundMe to get her this far to date,” Rubin said. “So, I think Jenna Ellis could be a linchpin here.”

“Certainly her work with, among other people, Rudy Giuliani, and her access to Trump, her proximity to Sidney Powell even, may make her a very attractive target if I were prosecutors,” she added.

Trump is facing 13 felony charges in Georgia, alongside an additional 78 felony counts in three other federal and state criminal indictments. He has pleaded not guilty on all counts, claiming to be the victim of “election interference” and political “persecution.”