WH BRIEFING: Trump Just ROCKED The Deep State And Has Washington in Total Panic

Jun 9, 2026Channel
AI Analysis
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Published1 month ago
Duration6:52
Video ID32NWR0xzUl8
Languageen-US
CategoryEntertainment
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video

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Views502
Likes61
Comments4
Engagement Rate12.95%
Likes per 100 views12.15
Comments per 1K views7.97

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President Donald Trump has formally sent Todd Blanche to the Senate as his nominee for attorney general, setting up a new confirmation fight as the administration puts Justice Department leadership at the center of its governing agenda. In today’s Next News Network White House Rundown, carried by streaming partner Trump Daily Posts, the past 24 hours at the White House were defined by a broad push across personnel, immigration, foreign policy and technology. The White House framed Blanche’s nomination as part of a wider emphasis on law enforcement and accountability at the Justice Department, while House Republicans moved a nearly $70 billion immigration enforcement package intended to fund ICE and Border Patrol through the balance of Trump’s term. The measure, as described in the rundown, would provide long-range support for the administration’s border security and deportation priorities and reduce opportunities for opponents to slow enforcement through yearly funding fights. In a related Justice Department action, officials announced denaturalization cases against 17 naturalized citizens accused of serious crimes, including child sexual abuse, financial fraud and unlawful drug distribution. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said the department would work continuously to ensure citizenship is reserved for those who obtained it lawfully and merit it under the law. The administration’s immigration push also met resistance in federal court. A judge struck down the President’s $100,000 fee on new H-1B visas, producing a split-screen day for the White House as one part of its immigration agenda advanced through Congress while another was challenged through the courts. The daily guidance also pointed to a possible appearance by border czar Tom Homan near the northwest gate, where reporters gathered at a secondary stakeout position in anticipation of a gaggle, underscoring how closely the press corps was tracking the White House enforcement message. On foreign policy, the President continued to project a mix of pressure and restraint on Iran and Israel. As summarized in the rundown, the White House position in the latest reporting was that Trump is warning against broader escalation while also telling supporters the United States is pressing for an outcome that prevents Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Artificial intelligence also returned to the center of the West Wing agenda. According to the daily guidance, the First Lady was scheduled to appear at the Presidential Artificial Intelligence Challenge National Champion Awards Ceremony in the East Room at 11 a.m., while the President’s public schedule remained limited after his overnight return to the White House. He began the day with Executive Time, closed to the press, followed by three closed Oval Office policy meetings set for the afternoon at 2, 3:30 and 5:30 p.m. The AI event fit the administration’s broader message that innovation, cybersecurity, child safety and national standards for the emerging technology should be addressed through a stronger federal approach rather than a patchwork of state rules. Pool reports also filled in the President’s Monday evening travel to New York. Reporters moved ahead of Trump’s departure from New Jersey at 7:02 p.m.; he arrived at the Wall Street landing zone at 7:19 p.m. and proceeded toward Madison Square Garden at 7:24 p.m., reaching the arena at 7:38 p.m. Along the route, poolers noted mixed public reaction, including some anti-Trump signs and gestures. Inside the President’s suite, the pool identified a group of administration officials, allies and family members that included EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, Deputy Chief of Staff Dan Scavino, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, Ambassador Steve Witkoff and Kai Trump, along with Knicks owner James Dolan and others. During the game, the pool reported boos when Trump appeared on the jumbotron during the national anthem, followed by cheers when the camera turned to Knicks star Jalen Brunson. The pool also reported NBA Commissioner Adam Silver meeting with the President in the suite. This White House Rundown follows those developments as the administration balances staffing, enforcement, diplomacy and technology, with broader national and Washington coverage continuing in today’s report.

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