Gaetz’s resignation will end ethics probe, House Speaker sayspublished at 00:58 Greenwich Mean Time
We have more details now on the news that Matt Gaetz has resigned from Congress.
A short while ago, House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters he received the resignation letter and it was “effective immediately”.
Johnson said he asked Gaetz what his reasons were – and the Florida lawmaker said “you can’t have too many absences”.
Johnson then explained the timeline, saying under Florida state law it takes about eight weeks to select and fill a vacant seat. With Gaetz’s resignation today, his replacement could be ready by 3 January.
A reporter asked Johnson about the ongoing House Ethics Committee probe into Gaetz.
Johnson said: “The House Ethics Committee would have no further jurisdiction over the person, no further authority over them”.
For context: Gaetz needed to resign from the House of Representatives in order to become attorney general, the role which Donald Trump has nominated him for. However, he still must be confirmed by the Senate before he gets that job – and the controversial lawmaker may not have an easy ride through Senate confirmation, according to some of his fellow Republicans.
Matt Gaetz resigns from Congresspublished at 00:33 Greenwich Mean Time
Breaking
Image source, Reuters
Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz, who Trump has nominated to be his attorney general, has resigned from the House of Representatives.
House Speaker Mike Johnson confirmed to BBC’s US partner CBS News that he has received the resignation.
Johnson said he had reached out to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, and he hoped the seat could be filled as soon as January.
Stick with us, we will bring you the latest updates on this situation shortly.
Cubans anxious of Rubio nominationpublished at 00:13 Greenwich Mean Time
Will Grant
Mexico, Central America and Cuba Correspondent
Image source, Getty Images
If there is one name which the Cuban Government – and Cubans in general – would have least wanted to see nominated as President-elect Trump’s Secretary of State, it is Marco Rubio.
As a Florida Senator he was Havana’s bête noire, perhaps the leading voice against engagement with Cuba during the final years of the Obama Administration – which had sought to normalise relations after six decades of hostilities.
After President Trump won in 2016, Rubio advocated for rolling back that policy, making it harder for Americans to visit the island and ramping up the US economic embargo to its harshest possible expression under a doctrine of maintaining “maximum pressure” on the communist-run island.
Cuba is, of course, uniquely personal to Rubio — while his parents emigrated to the US before the Cuban Revolution came to power in 1959, his grandfather fled a couple of years later, forced into exile as Fidel Castro took Cuba further into the arms of the Soviet Union. His grandfather was a big influence on the young Marco as he came to political consciousness.
Despite his popularity in Miami, most Cubans who live on the island shudder to think what Rubio will have in store if confirmed as secretary of state. There are still a few places where sanctions could yet be ramped up. Direct commercial flights to Cuba could be banned and diplomatic ties broken, shuttering the US Embassy in Havana.
One thing is clear: At a time when the island is suffering widespread blackouts and chronic shortages, Rubio is unlikely to extend any form of lifeline to Cuba, but rather attempt to further strangle the mainstay of its faltering economy, tourism.
For Cuba’s close socialist allies in the Western Hemisphere, Venezuela and Nicaragua, it is also likely to be a time of greater hostility with Washington over the next four years.
Postpublished at 23:52 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Donald Trump has nominated a series of people for roles in his administration. Most of them will also require Senate confirmation before they get the jobs, but some roles do not require that additional step – such as Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, and Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy’s government efficiency titles.
‘Has a better shot at dinner with the Queen’ – Republicans react to Gaetz nominationpublished at 23:33 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Earlier, Donald Trump announced controversial Florida congressman Matt Gaetz would be his choice for attorney general. That’s America’s top lawyer.
The choice sent shockwaves through Capitol Hill, even among some fellow members of Gaetz’s own Republican Party.
Republican Mike Simpson of Idaho responded to the nomination news with an abrupt: “Are you shittin’ me?”
Ohio Congressman Max Miller, also a Republican, told Axios that “Gaetz has a better shot at having dinner with Queen Elizabeth II than being confirmed by the Senate”.
Lisa Murkowski, a more moderate Republican who has spoken out against Trump in the past, told reporters she didn’t think Gaetz was a “serious nomination” and that “we need to have a serious attorney general”. “This one was not on my bingo card,” she added.
In order to fill the role, Gaetz will need Senate confirmation.
Gaetz will be ‘put through the wringer’ by Senate, Republican Congressman sayspublished at 23:16 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
As well as making a return to the White House for a presidential meeting, Donald Trump has spent the day announcing the names of some of his proposed Cabinet members.
One of these – Matt Gaetz – has drawn a lot of criticism since Trump announced he wanted him to be attorney general.
And a Republican Congressman admits that the Trump pick won’t get an easy ride when put before the Senate to be confirmed.
Speaking to BBC News, Jake LaTurner accepts that Gaetz is a “controversial figure”.
“Without question it will be a very interesting and controversial Senate hearing,” he says. “They will run Matt through the wringer, they’ll have a lot of questions… It will be a very controversial newsworthy spectacle, no doubt about it.”
And, pressed on whether he believes Gaetz should become attorney general, LaTurner stresses that Trump has the right to nominate who he likes after his election victory, but adds that these nominees must still go through the process set out by the constitution.
Biden and Trump discussed Israeli hostagespublished at 22:56 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Family members of some of the hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza met with President Biden today, and were told their loved ones came up during the president’s meeting with Donald Trump.
The families said both men are “fully aligned on the importance of releasing the hostages”.
And family representatives expect to meet with Florida Senator Marco Rubio, who has been nominated as Trump’s Secretary of State – the country’s chief diplomat – later this week.
Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters that the outgoing administration is “prepared to work with the incoming team in common cause, on a bipartisan basis, to do everything in our collective American power to secure the release of the hostages, both living and deceased.”
Four Americans are among the hostages still believed to be alive. At least three American hostages have died in Gaza since the attack on 7 October 2023, according to our US partner CBS News.
For context: The war in Gaza was triggered by last year’s attack, which saw hundreds of gunmen enter southern Israel. About 1,200 people were killed and 251 others taken hostage. Israel retaliated by launching a military campaign to destroy Hamas, during which more than 43,400 people have been killed in Gaza, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
Mike Johnson chosen again by Republicans to lead the Housepublished at 22:48 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Mike Wendling
US digital reporter
Image source, Reuters
Earlier Republicans in the US Senate picked a new leader, and now we have word that in the other chamber, the House of Representatives, the current leadership looks likely to continue.
Mike Johnson, a representative from Louisiana, was re-nominated as the Republican choice for Speaker of the House. The party is projected to win a narrow majority in the House once all of the races are settled, according to our US news partner CBS.
That narrow Republican majority has given power to small factions and made for some intense Speaker battles in the recent past. Kevin McCarthy was chosen for the post after a gruelling 15-ballot process after midterm elections in 2022, only to be ousted less than a year later.
After McCarthy, Johnson himself went through a complicated intra-party contest to get the post – which in addition to the clout of leading the House, is third in line to the presidency.
The new Congress will be sworn in next month and it’s likely the process will be much more straightforward this time. Johnson is a Trump ally and Republicans in the House are keen to get on with the business of enacting the president’s agenda.
The other top Republicans in the House – Majority Leader Steve Scalise, who controls the legislative agenda and Majority Whip Tom Emmer, who ensures that representatives stay in line – were also re-nominated to their posts.
Trump entered White House with lots of questions for ‘back and forth’ with Bidenpublished at 22:28 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Gary O’Donoghue
Senior North America correspondent
Let’s keep the focus on that meeting between Donald Trump and Joe Biden from earlier today.
For two men who clearly distinctly dislike one another, it can’t have been easy to sit down and chat for almost two hours.
So the White House description of the meeting as “cordial” and “gracious” does somewhat stretch credulity.
But given they did seem to get into substantive issues, it’s not surprising that Ukraine was right up there.
The outgoing National Security Adviser, Jake Sullivan, made an interesting argument in his post-game analysis of the discussion.
Not only did he say standing with Ukraine would be in America’s national interest, he posed the logic that this would be the best way to stop the US from being dragged into a war. It’s a Trump-shaped argument given the former president’s key boast is that he got involved in no wars in his first term.
According to press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, there was also what she called a “back and forth”, and Donald Trump came with questions. What those questions were, she would not say.
From Biden’s point of view, a norm of presidential transition has been fulfilled; undoubtedly we’ll hear at some point what the president-elect made of it.
Photos of Biden and Trump meeting releasedpublished at 22:16 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Image source, White House
Earlier today President Joe Biden and president-elect Donald Trump met in the Oval Office to discuss the transition from one administration to the other.
The White House has recently released some photographs of that meeting.
Image source, White House
Image source, White House
What does a US president’s cabinet look like?published at 21:58 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
We do not yet know exactly what shape Donald Trump’s cabinet will look like, but here are some of the roles on a typical US presidential cabinet:
- The vice-president – JD Vance
- The White House chief of staff, who oversees the West Wing, and manages the president’s staff and schedule – Trump has selected his campaign co-chair Susie Wiles
- The heads of the federal government’s executive departments – agriculture, commerce, defense, education, energy, health and human services, homeland security, housing and urban development, interior, justice, labour, state, transportation, treasury, and veterans’ affairs
- The US ambassador to the United Nations – Trump has nominated New York congresswoman Elise Stefanik
- The director of national intelligence – Trump has nominated former Democratic congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard
- The head of the Environmental Protection Agency – Trump has nominated former New York congressman Lee Zeldin
- The US trade representative
- The head of the Office of Management and Budget, aka the government’s budget chief
- The head of the Council of Economic Advisers
- The head of the Office of Science and Technology Policy
- The small business administrator
Gaetz is Trump’s wrecking ballpublished at 21:44 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Anthony Zurcher
BBC North America correspondent
If Trump had simply nominated Matt Gaetz for attorney general without comment it would have been a controversial pick.
The firebrand conservative congressman for Florida, who has been dogged by ethics investigations, is an unlikely choice for a position that typically goes to more senior politicians, well versed in law and with a healthy respect for the American judicial system.
In his social media post, however, the president-elect spelled out the message that he wants to send with this nomination. He is using Gaetz as a wrecking ball to demolish the Justice Department as it currently exists.
“Matt will root out the systemic corruption at the DOJ, and return the department to its true mission of fighting crime and upholding our democracy and constitution,” Trump wrote.
During the campaign, Trump promised retribution for the numerous investigations launched against him, several of which were initiated within the Biden administration’s Justice Department. Gaetz was one of Trump’s most ardent defenders during those investigations.
Now, it appears, Gaetz could be at the front lines of Trump’s efforts to bring to heel the Justice Department that so bedevilled him.
How do cabinet confirmations work in the Senate?published at 21:34 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Rachel Looker
Reporting from Capitol Hill
Donald Trump has been nominating people to be part of his administration all week. But it’s not as simple as saying, you’re hired.
Many of these nominations need to be confirmed in the Senate before they’re official.
US presidents have a shared power with the Senate to appoint judges, civil officers and confirm executive appointments.
Most nominations are routinely confirmed in the Senate without any pushback. But occasionally a nominee faces opposition, drawing out the process.
Nominees often have to testify before a committee at a congressional hearing. Then a vote is held to determine if the nominee moves on favourably, unfavourably or without recommendation to the Senate floor – where all senators cast a vote.
Each nominee then must receive a simple majority vote to be confirmed.
Many of the names that Trump has nominated – specifically those who will be heads of agencies – will need to go through this confirmation process.
There are some positions – such as the White House chief of staff, several roles in White House Executive Office and some assistant secretary roles – that do not require Senate confirmation despite being part of a president’s cabinet.
Newly-elected Senate Majority Leader John Thune has promised today that he will work to move through Trump’s appointments quickly.
Trump makes three major announcements after White House visitpublished at 21:10 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Image source, EPA
We’ve had a flurry of breaking news in the past hour, so let’s recap what happened:
- Donald Trump nominated Congressman Matt Gaetz as attorney general
- He nominated Florida Senator Marco Rubio as secretary of state
- And he nominated Tulsi Gabbard to be his director of national intelligence
- These roles require Senate approval, the upper chamber of Congress where Trump’s Republican Party hold a majority
- South Dakota Senator John Thune has been elected as the next Senate majority leader, replacing Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell
- Elsewhere, the Republicans also won control of the House of Representatives, the lower chamber of Congress
- Earlier, Trump met President Biden at the Oval Office, marking the start of the president-elect’s transition to the White House
- Trump told Biden that the transfer of power will be “so smooth”
Tulsi Gabbard ‘looking forward to getting to work’published at 20:55 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
We’ve had three big nominations from Donald Trump in the past half hour. One of them was Tulsi Gabbard, who he nominated for the role of director of national intelligence.
The former Democratic Party representative-turned-Republican has just taken to social media to say she’s looking forward to working with Trump.
“Thank you, @realDonaldTrump, for the opportunity to serve as a member of your cabinet to defend the safety, security and freedom of the American people,” she says. “I look forward to getting to work.”
And a reminder that these nominations require Senate approval before they can take on the roles. The Republican party has a majority in the Senate.
Who is Matt Gaetz?published at 20:45 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Image source, Reuters
With the news that Donald Trump will nominate Matt Gaetz to be his attorney general, let’s take a look at some of his bio.
Gaetz is a House Republican lawmaker who has represented Florida’s first congressional district since 2017.
The 42-year-old is an outspoken conservative who has made a name for himself as one of Donald Trump’s most loyal defenders on Capitol Hill.
A graduate of the William and Mary Law School, Gaetz has frequently sparked outrage with controversial remarks at committee hearings and in other public settings.
In the past few years, Gaetz has been accused of sex trafficking minors. The US Department of Justice did not bring charges against the congressman, but he remains under a House Ethics Committee probe.
Gaetz has denied all wrongdoing.
Gaetz was also the ringleader of the historic push to oust California Congressman Kevin McCarthy as the sitting Speaker of the House in October 2023. McCarthy has alleged a link between his removal and the ethics inquiry into Gaetz.
‘It will be an honour to serve’ – Gaetz reacts to nominationpublished at 20:40 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
In the last few minutes, Donald Trump nominated Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz to be his attorney general.
Gaetz has now reacted to the announcement, writing on X: “It will be an honor to serve as President Trump’s Attorney General!”
Trump nominates Matt Gaetz to be attorney generalpublished at 20:32 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Breaking
Image source, EPA
The breaking news keeps on coming. Donald Trump has just announced that he will nominate Congressman Matt Gaetz of Florida to be the attorney general.
“Matt will end Weaponized Government, protect our Borders, dismantle Criminal Organizations and restore Americans’ badly-shattered Faith and Confidence in the Justice Department,” Trump says on his Truth Social platform.
Stick with us, we’ll bring you more updates very soon.
Who is Marco Rubio, Trump’s secretary of state pick?published at 20:26 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Image source, EPA
We’ve had two major picks announced by Donald Trump in the past few minutes, so we’re going to take a closer look at who they are.
Let’s start with Florida Senator Marco Rubio, Trump’s pick for secretary of state.
Rubio serves as the vice-chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and sits on the Foreign Relations Committee.
He is considered a foreign policy “hawk” – meaning someone who takes hard-line positions – towards Iran as well as China.
While supportive of Ukraine, he previously said the country’s war with Russia needed to “be brought to a conclusion”.
Rubio and Trump were opponents in the race for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016 and the two developed a bitter rivalry.
They clashed on a variety of issues – particularly immigration – and the conflict led to various insults. Trump referred to the senator as “little Marco” and Rubio mocked Trump’s “small hands”.
But Rubio went on to endorse his rival and campaigned for him ahead of the 2024 election. He was also in the frame to be Trump’s running mate – a role that ultimately went to JD Vance.
Rubio, the son of working-class Cuban immigrants, was first elected to the Senate in 2010.
Trump nominates Tulsi Gabbard as director of national intelligencepublished at 20:18 Greenwich Mean Time 13 November
Breaking
Image source, Reuters
On the back of that breaking news that Marco Rubio has been nominated for secretary of state, we have some more breaking news for you.
Donald Trump has nominated Tulsi Gabbard to be his Director of National Intelligence.
Stick with us, there’s plenty of big stories emerging in the world of US politics today.