Trump Taps Fiserv’s Frank Bisignano To Head Social Security Administration
Also in the news: a spotlight on Pete Hegseth's history with alcohol, a look at what could happen to Texas' Medicaid program under the new administration, and more.
President-elect Trump announced on Wednesday night that he had chosen Frank Bisignano, the chairman of the payment processing behemoth Fiserv, to be the commissioner of the Social Security Administration, a sizable federal agency with more than 1,200 field offices and almost 60,000 employees. (Kim, 12/4)
Pete Hegseth, Trump鈥檚 pick as secretary of defense, would lead a military that has severe penalties for being intoxicated on duty. ... Trump has stood by numerous aides and appointees accused of sexual assault or indiscretion, but he has long disdained the abuse of alcohol by those around him dating back to the death of his brother, Fred Trump Jr., who suffered from alcoholism and died from related diseases at the age of 42. (Kranish, Lamothe, Ellison and Hudson, 12/4)
President-elect Donald Trump鈥檚 pick for FBI director, Kash Patel, promoted a supplement line this year that purports without evidence to help people 鈥渄etox鈥 from Covid vaccines. Patel plugged the supplements in posts on Truth Social 鈥 the social media platform owned by Trump Media & Technology Group 鈥 in February and April. (Bendix, 12/4)
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Mexican security forces have impounded more than a ton of fentanyl pills in what officials have called the biggest seizure of the synthetic opioid in the country鈥檚 history. Soldiers and marines found the fentanyl at two properties in the northern state of Sinaloa, late on Tuesday 鈥 exactly a week after Donald Trump threatened to impose 25% tariffs on products from Canada and Mexico unless the two neighbouring countries cracked down on the flow of immigrants and drugs across their borders with the US. (12/4)
President-elect Donald J. Trump has 鈥渓ost faith鈥 in the National Rifle Association, according to a top official at the gun organization, who argued in a recent letter to fellow board members that the N.R.A. needed to regroup so that it could help protect the Republican Party鈥檚 new edge in Congress in the midterm elections in 2026.Bill Bachenberg, the group鈥檚 first vice president and a staunch Trump ally, also told fellow board members that during this year鈥檚 election Mr. Trump was upset that the N.R.A. had not committed to doing more to help him win. (Hakim, 12/4)
State leaders have shown a decadeslong antipathy toward the health insurance program. If Trump makes severe reductions, it鈥檚 unlikely leaders would have the political will to make up any lost federal funds with state money, experts say. (Kriel and Priest, 12/4)