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New York City Mayor Eric Adams said Thursday he will be meeting with the incoming border czar to discuss impending plans for mass deportations.

Adams, speaking during a segment on MSNBC’s Morning Joe, said that he has a Dec. 12 meeting on the books with Tom Homan, the former Immigration and Customs Enforcement official whom President-elect Donald Trump has tapped to handle immigration matters.

“I want to hear the actual plan, how we are going to actually operationalize this,” Adams said, referring to pledges from Homan to begin deporting undocumented immigrants en masse, with a priority on those who have committed crimes in the U.S.

Adams’ team declined to provide additional details about the upcoming meeting, and the Trump transition did not immediately respond to a request for more information. But the two officials have repeatedly expressed openness to a sitdown in recent days.

On Monday, Homan said during an interview on Fox that he had been notified Adams had requested an audience. A day later, the former acting ICE director said he was planning to call the mayor. And on Thursday, Adams expressed support for removing from the city undocumented immigrants who have committed serious crimes.

“We’re not talking about those who are stealing apples,” he said. “We are talking about those who are shooting at police officers, raping individuals, and I would like to hear the border czar’s plan on addressing that.”

Nearly 100 former senior U.S. diplomats and intelligence and national security officials have urged Senate leaders to schedule closed-door hearings to allow for a full review of the government’s files on former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, Donald Trump’s pick to be national intelligence director.

The former officials, who served in both Democratic and Republican administrations, said they were “alarmed” by the choice of Gabbard to oversee all 18 U.S. intelligence agencies. They said her past actions “call into question her ability to deliver unbiased intelligence briefings to the President, Congress, and to the entire national security apparatus.”

A spokesperson for Gabbard on the Trump transition team on Thursday denounced the appeal as an “unfounded” and “partisan” attack.

Avril Haines, the current director of national intelligence, when asked Thursday whether intelligence sharing with allies could be in jeopardy under the next administration, cited the importance of those relationships and noted the strong bipartisan support for them in Congress.

The question, at a Council on Foreign Relations talk, focused on the especially close intelligence sharing among the Five Eyes — the U.S., Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. It did not mention Gabbard by name.

“It is hard for me to believe that anybody coming in wouldn’t want to maintain those relationships,” Haines said. “So I wouldn’t think of them as being in significant risk,” she added. “I certainly hope that will continue.”

Among those who signed the letter to Senate leaders were former Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman, former NATO Deputy Secretary General Rose Gottemoeller, former national security adviser Anthony Lake, and numerous retired ambassadors and high-ranking military officers.

They wrote to current Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and incoming Republican Majority Leader John Thune on Wednesday to urge the closed briefings as part of the Senate’s review of Trump’s top appointments.

They requested that Senate committees “consider in closed sessions all information available to the U.S. government when considering Ms. Gabbard’s qualifications to manage our country’s intelligence agencies, and more importantly, the protection of our intelligence sources and methods.”

The letter singles out Gabbard’s 2017 meetings in Syria with President Bashar Assad, who is supported by Russian, Iranian and Iranian-allied forces in a now 13-year war against Syrian opposition forces seeking his overthrow.

The U.S., which cut relations with Assad’s government and imposed sanctions over his conduct of the war, maintains about 900 troops in opposition-controlled northeast Syria, saying they are needed to block a resurgence of extremist groups.

Gabbard, a Democratic member of Congress from Hawaii at the time of her Syria trip, drew heavy criticism for her meetings with a U.S. adversary and brutal leader.

As the letter notes, her statements on the wars in the Middle East and Ukraine have aligned with Russian talking points, diverging from U.S. positions and policy.

Gabbard throughout her political career has urged the U.S. to limit military engagement abroad other than combatting Islamic extremist groups. She has defended the Syria trip by saying it is necessary to engage with U.S. enemies.

In postings on social media earlier this year she confirmed that the U.S. had for a time placed her “on a secret terror watch list” as a “potential domestic terror threat.” She blamed political retaliation. Neither she nor U.S. authorities have publicly detailed the circumstances involved.

Alexa Henning, a spokesperson for Gabbard with the Trump team, called the letter sent to the Senate leaders “a perfect example” of why Trump chose Gabbard for this position.

“These unfounded attacks are from the same geniuses who have blood on their hands from decades of faulty ‘intelligence,’” and use classified government information as a “partisan weapon to smear and imply things about their political enemy,” Henning said.

A spokesperson for Thune did not immediately respond to questions about the request.

The House Ethics Committee said the panel met Thursday to discuss former Rep. Matt Gaetz, but declined to release any details.

“The Committee is continuing to discuss the matter,” the panel said, adding there would be “no further statements.”

Ethics Chair Michael Guest (R-Miss.) declined to comment on the meeting but said he’d vote against a last-ditch effort by Democrats to force the release of the report. The panel’s top Democrat, Rep. Susan Wild of Pennsylvania, wasn’t at Thursday’s meeting, though Guest brushed off her absence and said “it’s not uncommon” for members to not be able to attend. Wild expressed frustration with Guest after the panel’s last closed-door meeting, saying he had mischaracterized a vote.

Guest said the panel would meet again this year. Wild’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

While Gaetz was President-elect Donald Trump’s original pick for attorney general, the Florida Republican withdrew from consideration as it became clear he didn’t have the votes to be confirmed in the GOP-controlled Senate.

The evenly divided panel deadlocked on releasing the the report detailing their investigation into Gaetz in a late November meeting. Since then, Democrats have stewed over the decision, though his withdrawal from attorney general consideration tempered some lawmakers’ concerns about the report.

After a day on Capitol Hill meeting with at least six senators, Pete Hegseth said he has no plans to withdraw as Donald Trump’s pick for Defense secretary even as doubts have been raised about his ability to be confirmed by the Senate.

“I’m proud to be here,” Hegseth said, leaving his last meeting of the day. “And as long as Donald Trump wants me in this fight, I’m going to be standing right here in this fight, fighting to bring our Pentagon back to what it needs to be.”

The veteran and former Fox News personality left the Capitol telling reporters he answered to only Trump, God, his family and the 100 senators voting on his confirmation, not the media, even as allegations over sexual harassment and alcohol issues hover over his nomination.

Speaker Mike Johnson is in talks when his own conference about how to fund the government. But he’s got at least two “no” votes no matter what he does.

Reps. Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.) and Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), two House Freedom Caucus members, told POLITICO that they would oppose any short-term government funding bill, known as a continuing resolution or a CR, regardless of whether Johnson attaches disaster aid to it. The Freedom Caucus took an official position this week that any disaster relief needs to be paid for and limited to what is “absolutely necessary” right now. President Joe Biden requested nearly $100 billion in emergency disaster aid.

“I have never voted for a CR and I don’t intend on concluding my time here by voting for one now. We have a $36 trillion dollar national debt and congress has failed to do its job by funding government through the appropriations process, as mandated by the Budget Act of 1974, again,” said Rosendale, who is retiring at the end of this term.

GOP aides already expect that there are enough Republicans who will vote against a CR no matter what that Johnson will need to depend on Democrats to avoid a shutdown. The deadline to pass funding legislation is Dec. 20.

President-elect Donald Trump is expected to attend the Army-Navy football game, according to two people who were granted anonymity to discuss the plans.

The game, set for Dec. 14 in Landover, Maryland, will be the 125th in the series. Trump attended the game as president-elect in 2016 and three times while he was president.

President Joe Biden has not attended the traditional match-up between the two military academies, though commanders in chief in recent years have appeared at the game (he did attend while he was vice president in 2012).

That tradition dates back to 1901, when Theodore Roosevelt attended. In a sign of neutrality, he spent half of the game on the Army side and half on the Navy side, according to a Washington Post report at the time.

An influential House Democrat is trying to preempt any effort by President-elect Donald Trump to oust the in-house watchdogs at agencies across the federal government.

Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee who is gunning for the same position on the House Judiciary Committee, sent letters Thursday to 32 inspectors general assuring them of his support. He also asked them to reach out if Trump or his allies make any effort to interfere with or replace them.

“I write to emphasize our unequivocal support for your leadership as an inspector general, which is more important now than ever,” Raskin wrote in the letters, which were obtained by POLITICO. “Although the transition from one administration to the next can bring change and uncertainty, Congress designed your role as an inspector general to be insulated from shifts in politics and priorities that often accompany changes in administrations.”

Some Trump backers have urged the president-elect to remove the watchdogs across the government and install his own picks, although prominent allies of the inspectors general have cautionedagainst such steps. Raskin also warned against such moves in his letters.

“I invite all inspectors general to contact my office if your independence is undermined or if you are being pressured or threatened with removal in any way, including if anyone falsely suggests that your position is temporary,” Raskin wrote.

One inspector general omitted from the barrage of supportive letters Raskin sent Thursday: Joseph Cuffari of the Department of Homeland Security. In October, Raskin called on President Joe Biden to remove the Trump-appointed Cuffari following an investigation that concluded Cuffari gave misleading answers to Congress and wasted taxpayer funds. He has denied wrongdoing.

Sen. Susan Collins, the top Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee, had a private meeting with Elon Musk on Thursday to discuss federal spending.

Musk’s meeting in Collins’ office is one in a series across both the House and the Senate on Thursday as he and Vivek Ramaswamy visit Capitol Hill to launch their cost-cutting venture, the so-called Department of Government Efficiency.

“I was very impressed with his energy and dedication,” Collins told reporters. She described the meeting as “an informal one-on-one discussion” that lasted more than an hour.

She said the conversation focused on “how we could improve the efficiency and effectiveness of government to better serve the American people and to save taxpayer dollars.”

“We did not go through any kind of list of cuts or anything like that,” Collins added.

Elon Musk, the billionaire electric vehicle mogul whom President-elect Donald Trump has tapped to help lead a government efficiency task force, told POLITICO’s E&E News on Thursday that he wants to eliminate tax breaks for EV buyers.

The Tesla CEO was on Capitol Hill on Thursday morning meeting with lawmakers to discuss his plans to downsize federal agencies and programs, slash what many Republicans consider wasteful spending, and boost the government’s productivity.

He is poised to lead the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, alongside fellow Trump surrogate Vivek Ramaswamy. Both men had a number of meetings scheduled with lawmakers Thursday.

“I think we just need to make sure we spend the public’s money well,” Musk told reporters after leaving the office of incoming Senate Majority Leader John Thune.

In response to a question about whether he would want to get rid of the $7,500 tax credit for certain electric vehicle purchases that Democrats passed as part of their 2022 climate law, Musk said, “I think we should get rid of all credits.”

Musk, a major Trump donor, has previously stated on the social media platform X, which he also owns, that he believes the government should scrap tax credits.

“Take away the subsidies. It will only help Tesla,” he posted in July, before Trump tapped him to lead his new advisory committee. “Also, remove subsidies from all industries!”

The Biden administration has relied on subsidies, grants, loans and tax credits to supercharge the clean energy transition, namely through the Inflation Reduction Act’s $369 billion in climate spending and the bipartisan infrastructure law.

Congressional Republicans were making plans this week for using budget reconciliation early next year to roll back many of those energy and climate investments. Many of those programs, however, have gained some bipartisan support as funds have flowed to Republican-led districts.

In a meeting this morning, Ramaswamy talked with Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who is leading the new Senate DOGE Caucus.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) organized a meeting among all House and Senate Republicans with Musk and Ramaswamy, slated to take place Thursday afternoon.

Pete Hegseth told reporters Thursday he still has President-elect Donald Trump’s support to be Defense secretary, while also dodging a question about how he is addressing his alcohol use with senators.

“I’m here with the support of President Donald Trump. As long as he supports me, which he told me this morning, I’ll be here,” Hegseth said from Capitol Hill when asked if there were any circumstances under which he would withdraw his name for the position.

The Fox host continues to meet with senators in efforts to secure confirmation votes amid allegations of sexual assault and a problematic drinking habit, both of which he has denied. It’s unclear if the efforts will be enough, as POLITICO previously reported Trump is considering nominating Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to replace Hegseth. The president-elect is eager to know the details of Hegseth’s meetings, Playbook reported.

When asked what he is telling senators regarding his drinking — amid reports that he has vowed to stop drinking if he is confirmed — Hegseth replied, “that’s why I’m telling senators and not you.”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who is seen as a critical barometer for Hegseth’s support among Senate Republicans, told Fox News earlier Thursday that she is not ready to vote yes on Hegseth’s confirmation after meeting with the nominee for a “frank and thorough” conversation on Wednesday.

Hegseth maintained Thursday that his meetings have been “great” thus far.

“Senators give great advice and this is how the process works. It’s not going to be tried out here, it’s going to be discussed inside the offices,” he said. “How we rebuild our military, put the war fighters first, that’s what Donald Trump — President Trump has asked me to do, and that’s what we will continue to do.”