Politics
Prosecutors seek to have ex-Green Beret accused of failed Venezuelan plot back in custody
Published
3 months agoon
By
May Greene
Federal prosecutors are seeking to return to custody a former Green Beret accused of plotting to invade Venezuela in 2020, arguing he is at risk of fleeing the United States after allegedly threatening a filmmaker who posted a $2 million bond for his release.
Over the objections of prosecutors, a Judge in Tampa last year ordered Jordan Goudreau’s release a few weeks after he was arrested on weapons smuggling charges tied to the failed coup attempt.
Filmmaker Jen Gatien’s had pledged her $2 million Manhattan apartment as collateral. In a court filing Friday, prosecutors said the court would have likely kept Goudreau jailed pending trial had it known about an “undisclosed side agreement” for the three-time Bronze Star recipient to surrender “significant cryptocurrency holdings” and other assets to the filmmaker to mitigate her financial risk.
Gatien is the co-director of “Men of War,” based on Goudreau’s account of the raid that ended with several combatants killed by security forces and two of his U.S. Special Forces buddies locked away in a Venezuelan prison. The documentary debuted last month on Amazon Prime.
Despite their once-close relationship, Gatien said she fears Goudreau may attempt to flee. In a court filing this week, she said that Goudreau threatened her and tried to elicit defamatory statements about her from unnamed individuals to block her from backing out of the bond agreement.
“F**k you I’m not going back to prison,” Goudreau wrote Gatien in a text message she included among other profanity-filled exchanges as part of her request to be released from the bond.
Goudreau, who at Gatien’s request earlier asked the court to remove her as a guarantor, said he regretted that a “personal disagreement” over his decision to end contact with the filmmaker was now playing out in court.
“My connection to her was unhealthy. I want to be free from her control over me and my life,” he said in a statement through his lawyer. “There is only one thing that Gatien gets right. I do not intend to go back to prison because I am innocent.”
The 2020 plot against President Nicolás Maduro, exposed by The Associated Press two days before the incursion, was carried out by a ragtag group of Venezuelan army deserters whom Goudreau said he helped arm and train in neighboring Colombia.
The Trump administration has denied any role in the bloody fiasco, which came to be known as the Bay of Piglets.
Gatien’s documentary echoes Goudreau’s claims that he acted in concert with Venezuela’s U.S.-backed opposition and was guided by a $15 million bounty — boosted this year to $50 million —for Maduro’s arrest. Goudreau has said he received frequent winks and encouraging words from officials and people close to the White House with whom he was in close contact at the time, including Donald Trump’s former bodyguard Keith Schiller.
Despite the denials of U.S. involvement in the operation, Trump has made no secret of his desire to see Maduro gone. In August, he deployed multiple warships, equipped with fighter jets and thousands of marines, to the Caribbean waters near Venezuela with orders to strike against drug runners allegedly working for a Venezuelan gang Trump designated a terrorist organization. To date, 17 people have been killed.
Goudreau, 49, said he became a believer in the cause of Venezuelan democracy after working security at a benefit concert held in Colombia to deliver humanitarian aid across the border.
Despite a lack of Spanish, he drew close to several exiled allies of opposition leader Juan Guaidó, who the U.S. then recognized as Venezuela’s legitimate leader. Over several months, a plan was hatched to invade Venezuela with the goal of sparking a popular rebellion.
In 2024, Goudreau was arrested outside Gatien’s apartment and charged with failing to obtain an export license to ship roughly 60 AR-15 rifles to clandestine camps where would-be freedom fighters were being trained.
Two of the rifles seized in Colombia contain traces of Goudreau’s DNA, while suppressors, night-vision goggles and other equipment had serial numbers matching those purchased by Goudreau and his Melbourne, Florida-based security firm Silvercorp, according to prosecutors.
Gatien on Tuesday filed a motion seeking to part ways financially with Goudreau. In the filing, she said Goudreau became “verbally abusive” and threatening when she confronted him.
“I WILL NOT BE VERBALLY ASSAULTED FOR PROTECTING MYSELF. I DON’T EVER WANT TO REHASH THE PAST WITH YOUR DELUSIONAL VERSION,” she wrote in all-caps in an email last year about their financial dispute. “STOP TAKING ADVANTAGE OF KINDNESS—DO THE CHRISTIAN THING.”
Gatien registered a Florida production company with Goudreau in 2021 and is described in court records as his girlfriend. His attorney at the bond hearing said the two had been living together for two years while Goudreau attended the New York Film Academy. But upon being handcuffed outside Gatien’s apartment, Goudreau used an expletive to tell the FBI she wasn’t his girlfriend.
Trial in the case is currently scheduled for February.
___
Republished with permission of The Associated Press.
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Politics
Following Donald Trump order, Mike Haridopolos bullish about Florida’s role in returning to the moon
Published
20 minutes agoon
December 19, 2025By
May Greene
President Donald Trump is doubling down on plans to return America to the moon, and U.S. Rep. Mike Haridopolos says investments in the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) will ensure that crew launches from Florida’s Space Coast.
“Space is literally taking off,” Haridopolos said.
The Indian Harbour Beach Republican cheered an executive order issued Thursday by the President on “Ensuring American Space Superiority.” That included a promise to land Americans on the moon by 2028, before the end of Trump’s term in office, which would mark the first manned flight to another celestial body since the last Apollo mission in 1972.
That tracks with the timeline for Artemis II, which intends to send a manned flight around the moon in April, and Artemis III, a 30-day mission where astronauts plan to land on the moon and explore its lunar South Pole.
But the commitment from the White House remains important as a sign of the administration’s commitment to spaceflight, Haridopolos said. The lengthy order coordinates efforts of the Transportation and Commerce Departments and to assert dominance of low-Earth orbit, both for exploration and for military purposes, all with NASA as the central agency.
“This the first President since (Ronald) Reagan to actually mention space in his inaugural,” Haridopolos noted.
Trump indeed promised on Jan. 20 to “pursue our manifest destiny into the stars, launching American astronauts to plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars.” And while his latest executive order offers no timeline on the red planet, it calls for a lunar outpost on the moon by 2030 that will “enable the next steps in Mars exploration.”
Haridopolos suggests that the order focused on space arrived now thanks to personnel drama around NASA finally coming to a close. The Senate in a 67-30 vote Wednesday confirmed NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, a SpaceX astronaut who commanded the first all-civilian spaceflight.
Trump initially announced Isaacman last year as his choice to head NASA, back when Trump first returned to office and was working closely with SpaceX founder Elon Musk. But in the midst of a high-profile feud with Musk this Summer, Trump withdrew the nomination and made Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy the acting NASA Administrator.
In November, Trump once again put Isaacman forward as his choice to head America’s space agency.
“Isaacman and I have been in constant contact throughout the year,” Haridopolos said. “I was disappointed when at first he was let go, and excited now because our space program isn’t government-owned. It’s a public-private partnership now, especially, as you know, with SpaceX. So I’m very bullish on what they’re doing.”
What needs to happen in space with a full-time leader installed? Haridopolos noted that a lunar lander remains behind schedule for that 2027 launch. He doesn’t want shortcuts in creating one, dismissing ideas like simply using the same designs as for the lander that brought Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to the moon in 1969.
Haridopolos knows NASA should have the resources for a future-looking spacecraft. As far as Florida goes, he’s confident they will make their ascent to the stars from Brevard County, largely thanks to investments in the Trump-championed Big Beautiful Bill. That included $9.9 billion for NASA, dedicating funding for the Artemis, Space Launch System and Orion spacecraft program.
While Haridopolos, like most Florida lawmakers, supports a Sunshine State push to relocate NASA headquarters to Florida, the most high-profile function of the agency is already there.
“We are going to be the place where they launch the rockets,” Haridopolos said. “Just a few years ago, we were wondering, would there be a different place to be launching? But we’re making those investments. Remember we put $250 million — we put a quarter billion dollars — into KSC in the Big Bill, and I think you’re going to see more resources going that way.”
Politics
Christine Hunschofsky proposes limits on AI companion chatbots to protect kids from self-harm
Published
51 minutes agoon
December 19, 2025By
May Greene
Rep. Christine Hunschofsky is pushing for regulations on emotionally responsive “companion chatbots,” arguing that rapid advances in artificial intelligence demand clearer rules to protect minors and vulnerable users.
Hunschofsky, a Parkland Democrat, recently filed legislation (HB 659) to impose disclosure, safety and reporting requirements for AI systems designed to provide humanlike companionship.
The bill’s focus is on self-harm prevention. If passed, the measure would prohibit operators from allowing companion chatbots to interact with users unless their platforms maintain evidence-based, publicly posted protocols to detect and respond to suicidal ideation.
If a user expresses such thoughts, the system would have to direct users to the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. Chatbots would also be barred from discussing suicide or self-harm.
“Increasingly, we are seeing heartbreaking cases where young people form deep emotional bonds with AI companions that end up pushing them further toward self-harm,” Hunschofsky said in a statement.
“These companion chatbots blur the lines to the point that people can’t tell the difference between a human and AI.”
There have been several cases in the past couple of years where interactions with chatbots tragically exacerbated the suicidal ideation of impressionable youths.
There was 14-year-old Sewell Setzer of Orlando, whose mother says he developed an intense attachment to a chatbot and the program’s responses worsened his mental state leading up to his death. Similar cases have arisen in California and Colorado.
HB 659, which pends a Senate companion, would mandate prominent disclosures clarifying that companion chatbots are AI-generated, not human, along with warnings that they may be unsuitable for some minors.
Platforms would also be required to offer both anonymous and standard age verification options.
For users known to be minors, HB 659 would require even more explicit disclosures that the user is interacting with artificial intelligence, default reminders at least every three hours encouraging breaks from continued interaction and measures preventing the chatbot from generating sexually explicit visual material or encouraging sexually explicit conduct.
Beginning July 1, 2027, operators would have to submit annual reports to the Department of Legal Affairs detailing how often their platforms issued 988 referrals and describing their suicide-prevention and content-restriction systems. The reports would be prohibited from including personal or identifying user information.
Violations would be treated as unfair or deceptive acts under Florida’s consumer-protection laws and enforced by the Attorney General. Companies would be given 30 days to cure alleged violations before enforcement action.
Hunschofsky’s measure comes amid discord between Florida and President Donald Trump’s administration on how to best proceed with AI regulation. DeSantis has pushed back against claims that a recent executive order Trump signed limits Florida’s ability to regulate AI.
Executive orders cannot preempt states, the Governor said, adding that Florida’s approach to the issue remains consistent with federal guidelines, which he said allow for child-safety and consumer protections.
Hunschofsky said her measure is about setting boundaries before harm becomes widespread.
“While AI continues to advance at a rapid pace, we have to ensure that safeguards are in place for our youth,” she said. “This bill is about protecting our children by making sure there are clear warnings, strong safeguards, and real accountability for the companies that put these companion chatbots on the market.”
Politics
Venezuelan boats — oily — trade partners — FUBAR — silencers — DMD
Published
1 hour agoon
December 19, 2025By
May Greene
Strike footage
Congress has passed a version of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that included a controversial measure dealing with events off Florida’s shore.
The bill includes a requirement that President Donald Trump’s administration provide all classified footage of boat strikes on Venezuelan vessels in the Caribbean. The administration has maintained that the boats were trafficking narcotics from Venezuela to the U.S., and potentially through Florida.
That’s footage that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth declined to show to members in briefings to the House and Senate earlier in the week. But members of Congress from both parties have raised questions about the legality of strikes. The spending bill forces Hegseth’s hand by withholding most of his travel budget until Congress can view the footage.
Florida’s Democrats released a joint statement criticizing the administration’s handling of the situation with Venezuela. An estimated 49% of all Venezuelans reside in Florida. The Democratic statement, released by delegation co-Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz’s Office, made clear that members harbor no sympathies for Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s regime but feel frustrated at the tactics of Trump’s government.
“As Floridians, we have no illusions about the brutality of the Maduro dictatorship. Venezuelans voted for a peaceful, democratic transition, but Maduro has clung to power through repression and corruption. That’s why we have condemned President Trump’s termination of legal protections for more than 600,000 Venezuelans while he designates Venezuela’s de facto rulers as a terror organization,” the statement reads.
“It is hypocritical to claim Venezuela is safe enough to send back innocent people, while also declaring it dangerous enough that we need to send in troops. The President has failed to present a clear strategy to Congress or the American people. He has justified his strikes with baseless claims about ‘Venezuelan fentanyl’ while pardoning major drug traffickers. The President seems more concerned with maximizing oil profits and separating families than bringing the Maduro regime to justice.”
All eight Florida Democrats voted for a pair of House resolutions separate from the NDAA that would have restricted Trump’s ability to act without congressional approval against Venezuela. But that effort failed as nearly all House Republicans joined together in knocking them down. Florida’s GOP lawmakers, also citing the plight faced by many Venezuelan Americans in the state, led the case against restricting action.
“I strongly oppose this resolution, which limits the United States’ ability to fight narco-terrorist traffickers in our own hemisphere, where we are most directly impacted,” said Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart, a Hialeah Republican and dean of the delegation. “Maduro is not a President. He’s the head of a narco-cartel that has taken over, by force and by terror, a great country, the country of Venezuela.”
But requiring greater disclosure from the Defense Department has proven to be a different story, as evidenced by the NDAA.
Speak for the beaches
Florida Republicans are making impassioned pleas to keep oil rigs away from Florida’s coast.
Sen. Ashley Moody brought her American Shores Protection Act to the Senate floor Thursday and called for its passage by unanimous consent. The Plant City Republicans’ bill would have prohibited oil drilling and natural gas exploration and development near Florida’s coastline.

“Florida has worked with President Trump for years to keep these operations off our pristine coasts,” Moody said, “because our coasts are a vital component of our state’s economic success. In fact, Florida’s beaches alone generate more than $127.7 billion a year in tourism spending and support more than 2.1 million related jobs.”
But the Trump administration has proposed opening up just such exploration despite objections from the entire Florida congressional delegation. The Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) proposed opening the eastern Gulf to new drilling, including areas covered under an offshore ban protected by an executive order issued in Trump’s first administration.
The Senate bill did not pass. But Moody said Sen. Mike Lee, a Utah Republican who objected to its unanimous clearing, committed to allowing the legislation to be heard in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, which he chairs.
Meanwhile, Rep. Jimmy Patronis encouraged Florida residents to make their own voices heard. The Fort Walton Republican urged constituents to contact the BOEM directly through an official comment portal. Public input will be collected through Jan. 23. Those unable to connect online can also submit comments by mail, and Patronis suggested that individuals send letters directly to the 11th National OCS Oil and Gas Leasing Program.
“It is our right to share our concerns and perspectives, and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s responsibility to listen to what we have to say,” Patronis said. “I encourage all my constituents to let their voices be heard during the comment period.”
Trade crackdown
China has maintained trade partner status with the United States despite years of economic tensions. Sen. Rick Scott wants that to end.
The Naples Republican just introduced the No Trade Preferences for Communist China Act, which would revoke permanent trade relations status with the Eastern superpower.

“Communist China has long taken advantage of our open markets, stealing our technology, undermining American workers and businesses and harming American families. It’s clear China is an adversary, not a trusted partner to the United States, and they have proven that time and time again,” Scott said.
“President Trump is doing an incredible job putting America first and cracking down on Communist China’s abuses, and as he works to hold Communist China accountable to its word, he must have every ounce of leverage available.”
Scott said the legislation would “send a clear message that the United States will not give privileges to nations that continuously prove they aren’t worthy of them.”
Beyond recognition
Should Congress fail to pass a timely budget, as in the record-long shutdown earlier this year, Rep. Cory Mills wants lawmakers to face a dock in pay. The New Smyrna Beach Republican filed the Failed to Uphold the Budget? Allowance: Reduced (FUBAR) Act. That’s the same initials as a familiar anagram familiar to military veterans regarding situations that are, err, screwed up beyond all recognition.

“This bill is simple. If Congress can’t do its job, Members shouldn’t get paid. Period,” Mills said. “Congress owes every American family accountability. The American people deserve a government that delivers results, not partisan games and not a Congress that rewards itself for failure.”
Rather than deny pay entirely, a move Mills said has constitutional problems tied to Article I of the Constitution, he chose to dock pay. But he said the bill would address a situation that is causing significant outrage among federal employees this Fall.
Silencers or health care?
One of the more controversial portions of the Trump-championed Big Beautiful Bill eliminated a $200 federal tax on gun silencers. Considering that Congress has also declined to extend health insurance tax credits, Rep. Maxwell Frost would like to see the firearm tax reinstated and redirected toward health care.

“Trump’s so-called ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ doesn’t just slash lifesaving programs like SNAP, Medicaid and Medicare — it also makes our communities less safe by subsidizing silencers and sawed-off shotguns, weapons that make mass shootings deadlier and harder to stop,” the Orlando Democrat said.
“At a time when our country has seen more mass shootings than days in the year and as seniors and families face rising health care costs, this legislation reverses these tax cuts and puts people’s health, safety, and well-being above the profits of the gun industry.”
The tax would generate $1.7 billion in revenue over the next decade.
Fighting rare diseases
When Health and Human Services Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr. announced the addition of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) and Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD) to the recommended screening list for infants, only one Representative was at his side.
Rep. Gus Bilirakis, a Palm Harbor Republican, stood alongside the Secretary and a handful of Senators, as did Floridians Allison and Michael Beacham. Allison, a Central Florida news anchor, has spoken about the problems her daughter faced due to a rare condition that went undiagnosed longer than it should have.

“I was especially honored to stand with the Beacham family and their daughter, Mattie,” Bilirakis said. “Mattie’s story underscores exactly why this issue matters. If her rare disease had been diagnosed at birth, she could have avoided much of the pain she has endured in her short life. No family should have to wonder ‘what if,’ and no child should have to suffer unnecessarily because a diagnosis came too late.”
Diagnoses of MLD and DMD in particular sometimes don’t happen until children are 4 or 5 years old, according to Bilirakis, but irreversible damage has already occurred by that point. Adding the conditions to the Recommended Uniform Screening Panel should result in earlier testing for those diseases.
“This decision represents a monumental step forward rooted in compassion and science,” Bilirakis said. “I want to ensure children like Mattie have the best possible start in life. Early screening can mean the difference between years of uncertainty and pain, and a future filled with timely care, informed decisions, and hope.”
Rescheduling weed
Rep. Greg Steube says Trump’s order to reschedule marijuana offers a window for Congress to pass his bill doing just that.
“President Trump is right. Now is the time to reclassify marijuana, and the Drug Enforcement Administration must open the door for scientific research into the plant’s medicinal value,” said Steube, a Sarasota Republican.
Trump’s order directs Attorney General Pam Bondi to “take all necessary steps to complete the rulemaking process related to rescheduling marijuana to Schedule III” of the Controlled Substances Act.

Steube’s bill (HR 4963) would expedite this by rescheduling the drug from its current Schedule I to Schedule III within 60 days of enactment.
“My Marijuana 1-to-3 Act will deliver exactly what President Trump has requested: legislation that moves marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III under the Controlled Substances Act,” Steube said.
“This bill will create new opportunities for scientists and physicians to develop treatments and cures for pain and disease. I am grateful for the White House’s leadership on this issue and call on my colleagues in Congress to bring the Marijuana 1-to-3 Act to the House floor immediately.”
SpaceX in Florida
Republicans in the delegation want NASA to keep SpaceX launching rockets off Florida’s Space Coast. Rep. Byron Donalds led a letter from 17 Florida Republicans to acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy, highlighting the benefits of the Elon Musk-led firm operating in Florida.
“As you know, Starship directly supports critical NASA and national security priorities, including safely landing Americans on the moon before China and expanding broadband access to millions of Americans,” the letter reads. “Starship’s fully reusable architecture positions the United States to establish a permanent crewed presence on the moon and ultimately Mars. These operations will principally occur from Florida, fostering a boom in the local economy with billions of dollars of investment and thousands of new high-paying jobs across our state.”

The message arrives after considerable tension between Musk and Duffy, whom the billionaire has labeled a “dangerously stupid … dummy” on social media. Musk has also successfully advocated for SpaceX astronaut Jared Isaacman to be reappointed by Trump as the permanent NASA Administrator, months after Trump withdrew the nomination and temporarily placed Duffy in charge of NASA. The Senate this week confirmed Isaacman.
The delegation letter emphasized the benefits of Duffy working with SpaceX despite the squabbling. The letter was also sent to Air Force Secretary Troy Meink and Federal Aviation Administrator Bryan Bedford on future relationships.
“Your work to integrate these operations into the Cape Canaveral spaceport and into the National Airspace System (NAS) will ensure continued American leadership in space. According to SpaceX, the test campaign that you and commercial partners have performed validates that LOX/Methane vehicle systems like Starship can operate concurrently without any disruption to other companies or to U.S. Government assets,” the letter reads.
“Additionally, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) continues to safely and effectively integrate Starship flights — and other rockets — into the National Airspace System (NAS).”
License to drive
The federal government requires commercial truck drivers to be at least 21 years old, but Rep. Brian Mast wants to open the profession to younger drivers. The Stuart Republican filed the Ceasing Age-Based Trucking Restrictions (CAB) Act, which would lower the age to obtain a federal license to 18.
Mast suggested that foreign truck drivers, such as one responsible for a fatal crash in his district in August, showcase a problem in the workforce under current restrictions.

“The CAB Act is about putting American workers first and fixing a system that doesn’t make sense. Right now, we’re blocking capable young Americans from taking trucking jobs, forcing companies to increasingly rely on foreign drivers who are unable to read English or understand road signs,” Mast said.
“If an 18-, 19-, or 20-year-old can safely drive a truck in their home state, they shouldn’t be sidelined by a federal technicality. This bill removes an unnecessary barrier, strengthens our supply chain, and ensures these jobs go to qualified Americans.”
Florida law already allows 18-year-olds to hold commercial licenses, but federal law imposes significant restrictions on where they can work until age 21. For example, drivers with only a state license can’t pick up cargo at any port, even if the goods are being shipped within the state.
Fighting campus hate
Rep. Lois Frankel wants to protect Jewish students and others from discrimination on college campuses.
The West Palm Beach Democrat introduced the bipartisan Protecting Students on Campus Act, which she said will increase transparency, oversight and accountability by elevating the role of the Education Department’s Office of Civil Rights in early identification of discrimination.

“Antisemitism and hate are surging on college campuses and around the world, and the consequences are deadly — as we saw in the vile attack in Bondi Beach,” Frankel said. “Students cannot learn if they do not feel safe. The Protecting Students on Campus Act gives students clear pathways to report antisemitism and discrimination, strengthens accountability for colleges, and helps ensure campuses are places where hate is not tolerated.”
She filed the legislation with Republican Reps. Don Bacon of Nebraska and Juan Ciscomani of Arizona, and with Democratic Reps. Lucy McBath of Georgia and Haley Stevens of Michigan. The bill addresses all campus discrimination, but Frankel’s Office spotlighted the current atmosphere surrounding Jewish students, about 83% of whom say they have witnessed antisemitic incidents on campus.
“American Jewish Committee’s (AJC) State of Antisemitism in America 2024 Report found that 35% of Jewish college students experienced antisemitism during their time on campus, and 48% felt unsafe or avoided expressing their views or Jewish identity. These numbers reflect an alarming reality: Jewish students are being targeted and marginalized in unprecedented ways,” said Ted Deutch, CEO of American Jewish Committee and a former member of the delegation.
Senate approved
The Senate OK’d several Trump appointees from Florida to positions within the administration.
James Percival, who previously served as Moody’s Chief of Staff when she served as Florida Attorney General, earned approval to be General Counsel for the Homeland Security Department. Andrew Tysen Duva, a Jacksonville federal prosecutor, also secured confirmation as Assistant Attorney General. Both of those earned a shoutout online from Florida’s Junior Senator.

“The Sunshine State leads the way!” Moody posted. “Congratulations to all the Floridians who were confirmed tonight, including James Percival and Tysen Duva.”
Senate action also included confirming Henry Mack, a philosophy professor who has taught at the University of Miami and Florida State University, as Assistant Secretary of Labor. Pedro Allende, meanwhile, won a thumbs-up to become Under Secretary for Science and Technology, Department of Homeland Security.
Michael Borders will serve as Air Force Assistant Secretary, and Maurice Todd will be the Assistant Defense Secretary.
Arthur Graham secured a position on the Tennessee Valley Authority Board. Edward Frost will now serve as Administrator of General Services. Laura DiBella will become a Federal Maritime Commissioner through 2028, while Trent Morse will serve on the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority until 2030.
Meanwhile, Benjamin Leone, founder of Leon Medical Centers, was appointed U.S. Ambassador to Spain. Rabbi Yehuda Kaploun is now also the Ambassador, serving as Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism. Lawyer Michael Selig will now chair the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
On this day
Dec. 19, 1776 — “Thomas Paine publishes ‘The American Crisis’” via History.com — The essay was a shot in the arm to Patriots during a tough stretch of the American Revolution. In it, he wrote: “These are the times that try men’s souls; the Summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.” When these phrases appeared in the pages of the Pennsylvania Journal for the first time, General George Washington’s troops were encamped on the Delaware River. They had suffered humiliating defeats and lost New York City to British troops.
Dec. 19, 1950 — “Dwight Eisenhower becomes NATO’s first Supreme Allied Commander Europe” via United States European Command — He subsequently activated the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe and began forming his new multinational staff at Roquencourt near Paris, France. President Harry Truman gave Gen. Eisenhower authority over all U.S. Forces in the theater. Eisenhower was reluctant to be “dual-hatted” as commander. Nonetheless, by mid-May 1952, he informed the Joint Chiefs of Staff that, as SACEUR, he would assume direct command of the U.S. Forces in Europe and establish a separate staff under a deputy to conduct joint U.S. military affairs.
Happy birthday
Best wishes to Rep. Jared Moskowitz, who turned 45 on Thursday, Dec. 18.
___
Peter Schorsch publishes Delegation, compiled by Jacob Ogles, edited and assembled by Phil Ammann and Ryan Nicol.
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