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Privacy watchdog concerned as Alberta passes bill to end fall legislature sittingEngland will be searching for redemption after their series loss in Pakistan when they face a buoyant New Zealand in three Tests starting in Christchurch on Thursday. Watch NZ vs. England three-test series LIVE on Kayo | New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited time offer. Head coach Brendon McCullum says New Zealand wickets will be better suited to England’s aggressive brand of cricket, dubbed “Bazball”, after his side were crushed in the final two Tests in Pakistan on turning tracks. “We were challenged at times over there in pretty extreme conditions but hopefully we can find (New Zealand) a bit more to our liking,” McCullum said. But England have not won a Test series in New Zealand since 2008. “We’re not quivering, we’re looking forward to the challenge. We love playing against the best teams and to test ourselves.” “That’s international sport -- you want to see where you’re at and have your game challenged and hopefully come out on top.” New Zealand are full of confidence after a rare 3-0 Test series sweep in India, ending their hosts’ 12-year unbeaten streak at home. “I think there’s so much anticipation for this series, with New Zealand pulling off what was in my opinion, the most remarkable performance in New Zealand cricket history,” former New Zealand captain McCullum said. Although England were outplayed after winning the first Test in Pakistan to lose the series 2-1, McCullum has largely remained loyal to the squad. The lone new face is Jacob Bethell, a 21-year-old who was Tuesday named to make his debut batting at number three after wicketkeeper Jordan Cox was ruled out with a broken thumb. Bethell, who has never batted higher than number four in first-class cricket, where he averages 25.44, only made his international debut two months ago in white ball matches against Australia and the West Indies. Joe Root stays at number four, despite making 262 when he batted third in the first Test in Pakistan last month. Regular number three Ollie Pope takes the gloves and drops down to bat at six, with captain Ben Stokes at seven. First-choice wicketkeeper Jamie Smith is on paternity leave. New Zealand are riding high after their series triumph in India, achieved without their talisman Kane Williamson who returns from injury to bolster their ranks. A series sweep against England and lifting the inaugural Crowe-Thorpe Trophy would also put New Zealand on the cusp of reaching the final of the World Test Championship. They have the added motivation of giving veteran pace bowler and former captain Tim Southee a memorable send off, but are yet to name their starting XI. The long-time New Zealand spearhead made has debut against England in 2008 and is due to retire at the end of the three-match series. Southee is New Zealand’s second most successful Test wicket-taker with 385 dismissals, second only to Richard Hadlee’s 431. WHAT IS THE CROWE-THORPE TROPHY? Batsmen Martin Crowe and Graham Thorpe will be honoured by New Zealand and England playing for a trophy named after them during all future Test series between the sides, starting this week. The Crowe-Thorpe Trophy, a collaboration with the men’s families, is made from wood sourced from their bats. Crowe, who scored five centuries against England, died in 2016, while Thorpe, a constant thorn in the side of New Zealand teams, took his own life earlier this year. “Today’s generation of players are standing on the shoulders of those who went before them, players like Graham and Martin,” said New Zealand Cricket chief Scott Weenink on Tuesday. “It’s good that we recognise this and respect their legacy.” England cricket chief Richard Gould called Crowe and Thorpe “two legends of the game”. “It is fitting that Test series between our two men’s sides will now be contested in their name,” he added. The bat gifted by Thorpe’s family is the one with which he scored his first two centuries against New Zealand in 1997, while Crowe’s is the willow used to score a century at Lord’s in 1994. Both players were hugely successful in their time. Crowe averaged 45.36 in Tests and posted 17 centuries with a highest score of 299, while Thorpe averaged 44.66 with 16 tons and a top score of 200 not out. New Zealand face England in the first Test starting in Christchurch on Thursday before the series moves to Wellington and then Hamilton. WHERE CAN I WATCH? Watch all the action on Foxtel and Kayo on Australia’s only dedicated 24/7 cricket channel FOX CRICKET. Catch all the international action every summer on Foxtel. SQUADS England: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ollie Pope, Ben Stokes (capt), Chris Woakes, Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, Shoaib Bashir. New Zealand (from): Tom Latham (capt), Tom Blundell, Devon Conway, Jacob Duffy, Matt Henry, Daryl Mitchell, Will O’Rourke, Glenn Phillips, Rachin Ravindra, Nathan Smith, Tim Southee, Kane Williamson, Will Young. FIXTURES 1st Test, Christchurch, November 28 - December 02, 2024 — 9:00am AEDT 2nd Test, Wellington, December 06 - 10, 2024 — 9:00am AEDT 3rd Test, Hamilton, December 14 - 18, 2024 — 9:00am AEDT SERIES WINNER ODDS (as per TAB on November 27) New Zealand — $2 Drawn series — $7 England — $2.3Keir Starmer holds secret talks with union boss amid growing backlash to Labour's controversial inheritance tax raid on farmers

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A double-digit victory in a packed, loud arena. Toughness from a deep, experienced lineup that once again is driven to win an elusive national championship. And, peeking a few seasons ahead, he saw an SDSU team that he views more as a future Pac-12 partner than rival. Behind big man Graham Ike and guard Ryan Nembhard, Gonzaga displayed its size, speed and strength in beating Brian Dutcher's young, hobbled squad 80-67 on Monday night. The Bulldogs returned the favor after SDSU won 84-74 last December at The Kennel in Spokane, which ended their 59-game nonconference winning streak. Both teams reached the Sweet Sixteen last season. Gonzaga is the only team in the nation to reach the Sweet Sixteen the last nine seasons as the Bulldogs extended their streak of NCAA Tournament appearances to 25 straight. Back in Spokane on Wednesday night, the Zags improved to 5-0 by routing Long Beach State 84-41, no doubt firing up expectations in the Lilac City and beyond. In a college sports climate dominated by NIL and the transfer portal, the Zags are stacked. Of the 12 possible players who could return from last year, 10 did, including all four starters. They returned 81% of last season's scoring and 71% of their rebounding. Six of its top seven scorers are back, along with 81.4% of minutes played. “We're tougher,” Few said. “We're physically tougher, we're mentally tougher, at least so far in the season. A lot of the same guys from last year. That's what happens when you stick around a couple of years. “You've got to have both to be able to go on the road in a place like this and dig out wins," Few added. "That's one thing San Diego State is going to bring. They're going to bring physicality, they're going to bring great athleticism, they're going to challenge you in every facet of the game.” Hoops powerhouse Gonzaga announced on Oct. 1 that it will move from the West Coast Conference, where it has dominated for most of the last quarter-century, into a Pac-12 conference being rebuilt around football. Beginning with the 2026-27 academic year, Gonzaga will become the eighth member along with holdovers Washington State and Oregon State, and fellow newcomers Boise State, San Diego State, Fresno State, Utah State and Colorado State from the Mountain West. While not as dominant as the Zags, the Aztecs have been one of the West Coast's best programs for several years, first under Steve Fisher and then Dutcher, his longtime assistant who is in his eighth season as head coach. “They're just going to be such a great partner, because they value basketball and they support basketball,” said Few, who's in his 26th season as head coach. “They understand, when you have a national program like we both have, it pays unbelievable dividends to the university, to the community, to the city and the state, like the Northwest and down here. They get that. We're looking for other like-minded places to partner with us.” Few said he would often chat with Fisher about the possibility of the Zags and Aztecs playing in the same conference. Fisher watches Aztecs games with his wife, Angie, from the second row above Steve Fisher Court. “We talked about it forever,” Few said. “I'm happy for Dutch. He's doing a great job." San Diego State reached its first Final Four in 2023, when Lamont Butler's thrilling buzzer-beater against Florida Atlantic lifted the Aztecs into the national championship game, where they lost 76-59 to UConn. SDSU was routed again by UConn, 82-52, in last season's Sweet Sixteen, while Gonzaga lost to Purdue. Gonzaga opened this season with a 101-63 win against then-No. 8 Baylor at the Spokane Arena. It was Gonzaga’s biggest victory margin over a top-10 opponent, over a team it lost to in the 2021 national title game in Indianapolis. Nembhard, who had 19 points and 10 assists against the Aztecs, said the Zags “did a really good job, actually,” of handling the pressure of playing at Viejas Arena. "Every time they went on a little run and the crowd got loud, we did a good job staying composed and trusting our offensive sets.” Nembhard will be gone when the Bulldogs and Aztecs are in the Pac-12 together, but thinks "the rivalry will be great. This is a great program. I played them a couple of times at Creighton, and they always gave us a tough game. They have a great fan base, a great coach over there, and they play really hard. I think it’ll be a great rivalry to come.” ___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here . AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketballSAO PAULO (AP) — Brazil’s federal police on Thursday formally accused former President Jair Bolsonaro and 36 other people of attempting a coup to keep him in office after his defeat in the 2022 elections. Police said their sealed findings were being delivered Thursday to Brazil’s Supreme Court, which will refer them to Prosecutor-General Paulo Gonet, who decides either to formally charge Bolsonaro and put him on trial, or toss the investigation. Bolsonaro told the website Metropoles that he was waiting for his lawyer to review the accusation, reportedly about 700 pages long. But he said he would fight the case and dismissed the investigation as being the result of “creativity.” The former right-wing president has denied all claims he tried to stay in office after his narrow electoral defeat in 2022 to his rival, leftist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Bolsonaro has faced a series of legal threats since then. Police said in a brief statement that the Supreme Court had agreed to reveal the names of all 37 people who were accused “to avoid the dissemination of incorrect news.” Dozens of former and current Bolsonaro aides also were accused, including Gen. Walter Braga Netto, who was his running mate in the 2022 campaign; former Army commander Gen. Paulo Sérgio Nogueira de Oliveira; Valdemar Costa Neto, the chairman of Bolsonaro’s Liberal Party; and his veteran former adviser, Gen. Augusto Heleno. Other investigations produced formal accusations of Bolsonaro’s roles in smuggling diamond jewelry into Brazil without properly declaring them and in directing a subordinate to falsify his and others’ COVID-19 vaccination statuses. Bolsonaro has denied any involvement in either. Another probe found that he had abused his authority to cast doubt on the country’s voting system, and judges barred him from running again until 2030. Still, he has insisted that he will run in 2026, and many in his orbit were heartened by the recent U.S. election win of Donald Trump, despite his own swirling legal threats. But the far-reaching investigations already have weakened Bolsonaro’s status as a leader of Brazil’s right wing, said Carlos Melo, a political science professor at Insper University in Sao Paulo. “Bolsonaro is already barred from running in the 2026 elections,” Melo told the The Associated Press. “And if he is convicted he could also be jailed by then. To avoid being behind bars, he will have to convince Supreme Court justices that he has nothing to do with a plot that involves dozens of his aides. That’s a very tall order,” Melo said. A formal accusation of an attempted coup means the investigation has gathered indications of “a crime and its author,” said Eloísa Machado de Almeida, a law professor at Getulio Vargas Foundation, a university in Sao Paulo. She said she believed there was enough legal grounds for the prosecutor-general to file charges. Bolsonaro’s allies in Congress have been negotiating a bill to pardon individuals who stormed the Brazilian capital and rioted on Jan. 8, 2023 in a failed attempt to keep the former president in power. Analysts have speculated that lawmakers want to extend the legislation to cover the former president himself. However, efforts to push a broad amnesty bill may be “politically challenging” given recent attacks on the judiciary and details emerging in investigations, Machado said. On Tuesday, Federal Police arrested four military and a Federal Police officer, accused of plotting to assassinate Lula and Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes as a means to overthrow the government following the 2022 elections. And last week, a man carried out a bomb attack in the capital Brasilia . He attempted to enter the Supreme Court and threw explosives outside, killing himself.Senior Lily Wahinekapu scored a team-high 20 points and made a crucial step-back jumper with 38 seconds remaining to help the Hawaii women’s basketball team hold off Louisiana-Monroe 69-64 today at SimpliFi Arena at Stan Sheriff Center. Freshman center Ritorya Tamilo added 12 points, eight rebounds, five blocks and three steals for Hawaii (2-1). Daejah Phillips poured in 13 points and six assists for UH, which rode its starting lineup of Wahinekapu, Phillips, Tamilo, Imani Perez and MeiLani McBee for heavy minutes. All five played at least 27 minutes with Phillips recording a game-high 33 minutes. UH led by as many as 16 points in the second half but gave up 15 points on free throws in the third quarter alone to allow the Warhawks (3-2) to get back into the game. Jakayl Johnson scored 24 of her game-high 25 points in the second half and ULM pulled within a point at 64-63 in the final minute. Wahinekapu’s jumper made it a 3-point game and Phillips grabbed a crucial offensive rebound off a Wahinekapu miss up 3 and McBee hit two free throws to put the game away. The Warhawks never led. Up next for Hawaii is Eastern Washington on Sunday at 2:30 p.m.

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Big Ten slate features Indiana-Ohio State showdown and Penn State-Minnesota matchup Things to watch this week in the Big Ten Conference: Game of the week This marks the 98th matchup between these two teams, but it's only the fourth time both teams have been ranked. Although Indiana is unbeaten, its soft schedule means the Hoosiers aren't assured of making the 12-team field if they lose this game. The only team with a winning record that Indiana has beaten is Washington (6-5). Ohio State needs a win to have a realistic shot at a rematch with top-ranked Oregon in the Big Ten championship game. Ohio State has beaten Indiana 28 straight times since the Hoosiers posted back-to-back victories in 1987-88. The undercard This is likely Penn State's biggest obstacle on its way to a potential playoff berth. The Nittany Lions' lone remaining regular-season game is a Nov. 30 home matchup with Maryland (4-6, 1-6). Minnesota has had an extra week to prepare this game since its 26-19 loss at Rutgers on Nov. 9, which snapped a four-game winning streak. Penn State and Minnesota have split their last four meetings, with the home team winning each time. Impact players Penn State DE Abdul Carter has multiple tackles for loss in each of his last three games. He ranks second among all Bowl Subdivision players in tackles for loss (17 1⁄2). Southern California RB Woody Marks rushed for a career-high 146 yards in a 28-20 win over Nebraska. Marks has six 100-yard rushing performances this season. Rutgers RB Kyle Monangai is the first Scarlet Knight to rush for 1,000 yards in back-to-back seasons since Ray Rice did it three straight years from 2005-07. Monangai has run for 1,028 yards this season and rushed for 1,262 yards last year. Oregon OLB Matayo Uiagalelei recorded a sack and had a game-clinching interception as the top-ranked Ducks won 16-13 at Wisconsin last week. He has 8 1⁄2 sacks this season to rank second in the Big Ten. Inside the numbers Four of the top seven Bowl Subdivision quarterbacks in passer rating are from the Big Ten. Indiana's Kurtis Rourke is second, Ohio State's Will Howard is third, Penn State's Drew Allar is fifth and Oregon's Dillon Gabriel is seventh. ... Illinois QB Luke Altmyer has thrown 18 touchdown passes with only three interceptions. The only Power Four quarterback with a better touchdown/interception ratio while throwing at least 10 touchdown passes is Clemson's Cade Klubnik, who has 26 touchdowns and four interceptions. ... Rutgers' three Big Ten wins matches its largest total since joining the league in 2014. Rutgers also had three conference wins in 2014, 2017, 2020 and 2023. A victory Saturday over No. 24 Illinois would give Rutgers three straight Big Ten wins for the first time. ... Washington's 31-19 win over UCLA was its 20th straight home victory, representing its second-longest such streak in school history. The Huskies won 45 straight home games from 1908-17. ... Wisconsin heads to Nebraska this week having won its last 10 matchups with the Cornhuskers. Now don't get upset Penn State justifiably is favored on the road against Minnesota, but Bet MGM's 12 1⁄2-point spread seems way too big. Expect this game to have a single-digit margin.

Black Friday is just days away. But if you can't wait until sales officially kick off to upgrade or replace your TV , you can find some incredible early holiday deals at Amazon , Best Buy , and Walmart . You'll find great discounts from brands like Sony , LG , TCL , and Hisense on everything from high-end OLED models to entry-level smart TVs for college dorms and first apartments. Also: The best Black Friday deals live now I've spent years testing TVs at ZDNET , and am constantly looking out for the best deals and discounts from top brands, particularly around the holidays. To help you find the very best Black Friday TV deals, I put together a list of discounts and markdowns I've found at trusted retailers and directly from the brands themselves. Keep reading below to find out just how much you can save on a new TV, plus a few extras to round out your home theater. Our favorite TV deals for Black Friday 2024 LG C4 OLED 65-inch : $1,500 (save $1,200 at Amazon): LG's flagship OLED TV has a 144Hz native refresh rate, Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos support, and VRR support for both Nvidia G-Sync and AMD FreeSync Premium. It's also our pick for the best OLED TV you can buy. TCL QM85 98-inch : $4,000 (save $2,000 at Amazon): TCL's flagship QLED TV offers Dolby Vision IQ HDR, Dolby Atmos, up to a 240Hz refresh rate for console gaming, and built-in voice controls. I tested this TV , and found it offers excellent picture quality, great sound, and a dedicated picture mode at an affordable price. Samsung QN85D 85-inch : $1,800 (save $1,400 at Amazon): This big-screen TV has object-tracking sound as well as Dolby Atmos support for a more immersive experience while streaming movies, music, and TV shows. Samsung DU7200 85-inch : $900 (save $200 at Best Buy): A budget-friendly big-screen TV with 4K resolution, a 60Hz refresh rate, and object tracking sound. You'll also get a free 40-inch Samsung TV with purchase. LG Class 89 98-inch : $4,000 (save $2,000 at Best Buy): A cinema-sized screen with 4K resolution, a 120Hz refresh rate, AMD FreeSync VRR, and Dolby Vision HDR. LG C4 65-inch Current price: $1,500 Original price: $2,700 LG's flagship OLED TV features VRR support for both Nvidia G-Sync and AMD FreeSync Premium to prevent screen tearing and stuttering while console gaming. You'll also get a 144Hz native refresh rate for smoother motion during sports broadcasts and fast-paced movie and TV show scenes. TCL QM85 98-inch Current price: $4,000 Original price: $6,000 Grab this truly cinema-sized TV at Amazon for an impressive $2,000 off ahead of the Holiday shopping season. With Dolby Vision IQ and Dolby Vision support, you'll get clean, crisp audio and more accurate colors and contrast for a more immersive viewing experience. Samsung QN85D 85-inch Current price: $1,800 Original price: $3,200 This flagship QLED TV from Samsung not only supports Dolby Atmos virtual surround sound, it also uses Samsung's object tracking sound technology for a more immersive streaming experience for movies, shows, and music. Samsung DU7200 Current price: $900 Original price: $1,100 This budget-friendly big-screen TV has object tracking sound, a 60Hz refresh rate, built-in voice controls, and object tracking sound. And with your Best Buy purchase, you'll also get a free 40-inch Samsung TV (a $250 value). LG Class 89 98-inch Current price: $4,000 Original price: $6,000 A truly cinema-sized TV from LG that features 4K resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate, Dolby Vision HDR, AMD FreeSync VRR, and cloud gaming support. Black Friday OLED TV deals 2024 Samsung S90D 65-inch for $1,400 (save $800 at Amazon): Samsung's latest iteration of their flagship OLED TV features object tracking sound, a 144Hz peak refresh rate, and a Pantone Validated screen for color accuracy. Samsung S85D 55-inch for $1,000 (save $700 at Amazon): A more affordable version of Samsung's OLED TV with object tracking sound, built-in voice controls, and Dolby Atmos support. LG B4 77-inch for $1,600 (save $200 at Amazon): A more affordable OLED from LG with a dedicated gaming dashboard, 120Hz refresh rate, and support for both Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos. Samsung S95D 77-inch for $3,500 (save $900 at Amazon): Samsung's premium OLED offers object tracking sound, an expert calibrated screen for color accuracy, and a 144Hz refresh rate. Black Friday TV deals 2024: 40 - 43 inches TCL S3 40-inch for $140 (save $50 at Amazon): A budget-friendly smart TV with AirPlay support, Alexa voice controls, and 1080p resolution. Amazon Fire TV 2 Series 40-inch for $150 (save $100 at Amazon): A basic smart TV with built-in voice controls, 1080p resolution, and HDR10 support. Roku Select Series 43-inch for $200 (save $50 at Amazon): An affordable smart TV from Roku with 4K resolution, a 60Hz refresh rate, and HDR10+ support. Toshiba V35 43-inch for $140 (save $50 at Amazon): A budget-friendly smart TV that uses the Fire TV platform to give you access to thousands of streaming apps. LG UT70 43-inch for $230 (save $170 at Best Buy): A great entry-grade smart TV from LG with 4K resolution, a 60Hz refresh rate, and HDR10 support. Black Friday TV deals 2024: 55 - 65 inches Amazon Fire TV Omni QLED for $420 (save $180 at Amazon): Amazon's flagship TV uses the Fire TV platform to give you access to Prime's entire library as well as to thousands of other streaming apps. Hisense S7N Canvas TV for $700 (save $300 at Amazon): A gallery-inspired TV from Hisense that turns your living room into your own personal art show when you aren't streaming. TCL QM7 for $500 (save $300 at Amazon): TCL refreshed their mid-range TV line with Dolby Vision IQ HDR, Dolby Atmos, and up to a 240Hz refresh rate. Samsung Q80D for $800 (save $400 at Amazon): A mid-range QLED with Dolby Atmos and object tracking sound, built-in voice controls, and cloud gaming support. Black Friday TV deals 2024: 65 - 75 inches Samsung Q80D for $900 (save $500 at Amazon): An excellent mid-range TV from Samsung with object tracking sound, 4K AI upscaling, and Dolby Atmos support. Samsung QN900D for $3,500 (save $1,500 at Best Buy): Samsung's latest 8K TV gives you four times the resolution as a 4K model, letting you keep your home theater on the cutting edge. 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Black Friday 2024 TV deals: Discounts from top retailers TCL Q68 85-inch for $1,000 (save $500): A great mid-range TV with Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos support, a 120Hz max refresh rate, and built-in voice controls. LG QNED85T 75-inch for $1,000 (save $250): A great mid-range LED TV from LG with a 120Hz refresh rate, HDR10 support, and VRR support for both AMD FreeSync Premium and Nvidia G-Sync. Samsung The Frame 55-inch for $1,000 (save $500): A gallery-inspired TV from Samsung with dedicated art mode, anti-glare matte screen, and built-in voice controls. Sony X90L 98-inch for $5,000 (save $3,000): A cinema-sized TV with Dolby Vision HDR support, exclusive VRR features for the PS5, and 120Hz refresh rate. Hisense U6N 65-inch for $500 (save $200): This mid-range TV from Hisense supports both Dolby Atmos and Dolby Vision, has a 60Hz refresh rate, and Bluetooth connectivity. 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Samsung Class Q80D 85-inch TV : $1,748 (save $650): The popular Q80D series Samsung smart TV features QLED technology and up to 120Hz refresh rate. Samsung Class Q60D 65-inch TV : $698 (save $100): This QLED Samsung TV offers a vibrant image and up to 4K resolution. Samsung The Frame 65-inch TV : $1,298 (save $700): Samsung's popular The Frame QLED TV delivers beautiful 4K resolution images while doubling as a work of art when not in use. LG StanbyME Go portable TV : $799 (save $400): Yes, LG made a briefcase smart TV that you can take anywhere. At 27 inches, it's a full HD TV with WebOS and the portability to watch it in your backyard or while tailgating. Vizio 2.1 soundbar : $99 (save $30): This Vizio all-in-one soundbar supports Dolby Atmos and DTS. Vizio Elevate SE soundbar : $399 (save $100): This Vizio 5.1.2 channel soundbar boasts Bluetooth support, Dolby Atmos, and 3D spatial audio. Hisense R6 75-inch for $498 (save $200): A budget-friendly big-screen TV with Dolby Vision and DTS Studio Sound, a dedicated gaming mode, and the Roku TV platform for streaming. Samsung QN90C 75-inch for $1,698 (save $1,601): The previous iteration of Samsung's flagship QLED TV still has a lot to offer with object tracking sound, a dedicated gaming hub, and 120Hz refresh rate. Samsung The Terrace 65-inch for $2,974 (save $2,025): This outdoor TV is rated for partial sun exposure, making it perfect for covered patios and decks. Sylvox 55-inch outdoor TV for $1,349 (save $800): A waterproof TV designed for partial sun exposure, making it perfect for covered patios and enclosed porches. Roku Pro Series 55-inch for $600 (save $300): A mid-range smart TV from Roku with access to thousands of streaming apps like Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+. Samsung QN900C 65-inch for $2,788 (save $2,211): Samsung's previous iteration of their flagship 8K TV, which gives you four times the resolution as a 4K model and 16 times that of a 1080p HD TV. Hisense U7N 100-inch for $1,798 (save $1,200): A cinema-sized smart TV with a 144Hz refresh rate, Dolby Vision HDR, and Dolby Atmos virtual surround sound. Sony Bravia X93L 75-inch for $1,598 (save $900): A big-screen Mini-LED TV with a 120Hz refresh rate and VRR support for console gaming, Dolby Atmos virtual surround sound support, and exclusive features for gaming on the PlayStation 5. Sony Bravia A80L OLED 83-inch for $4,000 (save $800): With a 120Hz refresh rate and support for both Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos, you'll get a cinema-quality experience in the comfort of your own living room. Samsung DU6950 75-inch for $550 (save $200): A budget-friendly big-screen TV with 4K resolution, a 60Hz refresh rate, and built-in voice controls. LG NanoCell 75 65-inch for $480 (save $420): A great mid-range LED model from LG with 4K resolution, dynamic tone mapping, and a 60Hz refresh rate. LG Class 99 8K 75-inch for $2,300 (save $1,200): This TV gives you 8K resolution, which is four times the detailing of 4K, and 16 times that of 1080p. Hisense U7 75-inch for $900 (save $600): A great mid-range TV with the Google TV platform for access to thousands of streaming apps and a 144Hz refresh rate. Hisense QD5 65-inch for $330 (save $170): A budget-friendly QLED from Hisense with Dolby Vision HDR, an automatic low-latency mode for console gaming, and voice-enabled remote. Hisense QD6 75-inch for $450 (save $250): A budget-friendly big-screen with an updated QLED panel for better color and contrast as well as Dolby Vision HDR support. Hisense U6 75-inch for $650 (save $550): The Hisense U6 supports both Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos, AMD FreeSync VRR, Wi-Fi 6, and both Chromecast and Apple AirPlay. Roku Pro 75-inch for $1,000 (save $700): Roku's own flagship TV has a 120Hz refresh rate, Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos support, and a QLED panel for more lifelike colors and contrast. Hisense L9H laser projector with 100-inch screen for $3,000 (save $2,500): An ultra-short throw laser projector with an included screen, Dolby Vision and Atmos support, 4K resolution, and a 3000 lumen lamp. Roku Plus 75-inch for $750 (save $150): An affordable big-screen TV that uses the Roku platform to give you access to thousands of streaming apps, integrated voice controls, and live TV. Furrion Aurora 55-inch for $1,200 (save $800): This ruggedized outdoor TV is rated for full shade, making it perfect for covered patios and enclosed porches or 3-season rooms. LG UT90 98-inch for $2,500 (save $1,500): A simplified smart TV with a 120Hz refresh rate, HDR10 support, and 4K resolution. Hisense A6 85-inch for $700 (save $300): A budget-friendly big-screen TV that uses the Google platform to give you access to popular streaming apps, integrated voice controls, and Dolby Vision HDR support. Insignia F30 58-inch for $250 (save $130): A simple smart TV with 4K resolution, HDR10 support, and a 60Hz refresh rate. Samsung S84D 77-inch OLED for $1,600 (save $1,700): This Best Buy-exclusive OLED is one of Samsung's more budget-friendly versions, offering signature OLED picture quality, excellent sound, and tons of smart features for a more affordable price. Black Friday 2024 home audio deals Samsung HW-Q850D for $600 (save $500 at Best Buy): A high-end home theater system with Dolby Atmos support, 7.1.2CH audio, and an HDR10+ passthrough. LG S95TR for $1,000 (save $500 at Best Buy): LG's premium home audio system features Dolby Atmos support, a wireless subwoofer, and Bluetooth connectivity. Roku Streambar SE for $70 (save $30 at Best Buy): A 2-in-1 streaming box and soundbar that gives you access to thousands of popular apps and boosts dialogue. JBL Bar 9.1 for $570 (save $630 at Amazon): A high-quality home audio system with a wireless subwoofer, dedicated satellite speakers, and a 4K Dolby Vision passthrough. FAQs Black Friday is the day after Thanksgiving in the US. This year, it falls on Nov. 29, 2024. They absolutely can be! Televisions are one of the few electronics categories that offers regular, predictable sale seasons throughout the calendar year. With Black Friday being one of the most prominent. Big brands like Sony, LG, and Samsung usually have their biggest discounts during the holiday shopping season, but it's not uncommon to also find summer sales on high-end TVs as well as budget-friendly models from TCL and Hisense. In terms of which day will have the best TV deals, in the past, we've seen TVs typically have the better deals on Black Friday. Since prices fluctuate throughout the long weekend, if you see a big drop, we'd recommend picking it up quickly before it goes out of stock. You can check sites like CamelCamelCamel to see price histories. Black Friday is prime time for scammers and resellers. Each deal on this list has been vetted as being sold and shipped by reliable retailers like Amazon, Best Buy, and Walmart. I've also avoided ultra-budget brands like Onn and Vizio, as the discounts are negligible at the time of writing, and these brands don't offer the same quality TVs as even TCL or Hisense. ZDNET's resident TV experts have tested and researched dozens of models from just as many brands, and we all agree that the Samsung S95D OLED is the best TV you can buy right now. With an updated OLED panel for a more lifelike picture, a 120Hz refresh rate, object tracking sound, and a dedicated gaming dashboard with cloud gaming support. Based on the OLED TVs we've tested , we've found that they offer better picture quality, including higher contrast, truer color accuracy, and deeper blacks than QLEDs. However, what works best for you might depend on your viewing environment and individual needs. For more details and advice on how to choose which is right for you, check out our full OLED vs. QLED explainer . Once you've hammered out a budget for your next TV, there are a few other important factors to consider: Brand integrity: It's tempting to pick up that ultra-cheap TV during a sale event from a no-name brand. But you may end up paying more to replace it in a few years (or months) if it was built with cheap components or stops receiving over-the-air firmware updates. No matter which brand of TV you choose, make sure that the company offers industry standard return and exchange policies as well as clear options for customer service. Smart features: Not all smart TVs are created equal, with premium options from brands like LG and Sony offering OLED panels for incredible picture quality as well as quality of life features like built-in voice controls and pre-loaded suites of streaming apps. Make sure the TV you have your eye on has all of the smart features you need to keep up with your favorite shows and movies. Reasons to upgrade: It seems like every year TV brands refresh their model line-ups. Sometimes those refreshes introduce cool new options like Samsung's object tracking sound and cloud gaming support. Others are more subtle upgrades like improved QLED panels and speakers or new app support. Before you drop a whole paycheck on a new TV, make sure it offers enough reasons to upgrade to make it worth the price. The best smartwatches you can buy: Apple, Samsung, Google, and more compared The 5 best VPN services (and tips to choose the right one for you) The best Android phones you can buy (including a surprise pick) The best robot vacuum and mop combos (and if they're worth the money)There was an odd atmosphere on Capital Hill . or signup to continue reading A taut electric vibe tussled with a summery last-day-of-school looseness. Haggard correspondents intoned philosophic, wearily resigned to their designation as villains in the febrile digital colosseum of political combat. With an unholy crush in the Senate - 31 bills passed on one day and 45 for the week - nervous but footloose lower house MPs killed time. Ministers floated between offices, affecting calm in that way trial lawyers do after closing arguments when everything hangs on a curmudgeonly judge or an inscrutable jury. The Speaker, Milton Dick, expressed his thanks to the sprawling complex's thousands of staff for keeping operational what Anthony Albanese described as "the most visited building in Australia". And it certainly seemed "most-visited" at Aussies on Thursday morning - the roiling social hub where over three decades, Dom Calabria and his father Tony have furnished coffee and meals to stressed press gallery journos, MPs, PMs and frontbenchers, and an infinity of lobbyists and public officials. In their ritual post-question time speeches before the summer break - a bilateral nod to civility dubbed "the hypocrisies" by one scribe - Albanese and Peter Dutton praised old Tony's 28-year stint at Aussies. "Tony is the man who did so much to enhance the seat of democracy here," Albanese remarked warmly to his fellow "Italo-Australian" looking up to the public gallery where three generations of Calabrias watched on. Dutton lauded the ailing 84-year-old's migrant story having emigrated at just 14. "He has worked every day since then, he has educated his children, he has provided a role model and has given that love to his family that has created a remarkable legacy," Dutton said. In other comments, Albanese revealed that he and Dutton did not hate each other after all. He noted that while he had visited Morrison's office only once as opposition leader (a startling factoid since the global pandemic occasioned a bipartisanship likened to wartime), Dutton had been into Albanese's prime ministerial suite, well, "more often than I'd like". Cue laughter. Yet coursing impatiently under all this ersatz chumminess, was the existential fight to come. Each knows that within months, one will be up, the other, finished. Since the Second World War, it has occupied the Treasury benches for just 29 years. Nonetheless, Labor goes into next year's election comforted by electoral history and shielded by an unofficial "Swiss G]guard" of community independents. But that historical precedent - every first-term federal government since 1932 has secured a second term - may amount to nothing in this disintermediated age of antisocial media and permanent grievance. For the 93 years since the rookie Scullin Labor government crashed along with everything else in the Great Depression, incumbency has been a winged keel. Australian voters have tended to pick and stick, at least once. Now though, around the democratic world in 2024, the vogue is to "pick then kick". But what about that Swiss guard of independents? Albanese's worst-case scenario is that one or all of the first-term teals lose. Another risk is that some back a Dutton executive. Currently Labor has 78 seats to the Coalition's 58. Dutton needs a net gain of 18 seats to govern in his own right. A huge task. Polls suggest the most likely outcome is a minority parliament. Labor could lose half a dozen seats to Dutton's Liberals and still be close enough to credibly seek crossbench commitments for supply and confidence. But what would the teal independents do - who would they prefer to form government? The lesson from the minority Gillard period is that indies who hold conservative seats but back progressive governments face extinction themselves. In this light,, it may be instructive to consult the AEC's "two-party preferred" exercise, in which it allocated all 151 "Reps" seats to either of the two major parties (irrespective of whether the seat actually fell to a third party). Unsurprisingly, it shows that preferences for either of the two majors (ahead of the other) favoured the Liberals by the following percentages in teal seats: Curtin (5.4), Goldstein (4.8), Kooyong (4.1 ), Mackellar (8.6), Warringah (1.4), Wentworth (5.9). These pro-Liberal margins may even expand in a 2025 election devoid of the unpopular Morrison. Yet this cuts both ways. In formerly safe Labor Fowler, Dai Le (assuming she survives) would have to ignore a strong Labor proclivity in her seat to back a Dutton-led minority government. Another outlier is Alexander Downer's erstwhile stronghold of Mayo, held by the centre-right indie Rebekah Sharkie. Her Adelaide Hills seat actually favoured Labor by 1.6 per cent in 2022. In all three of the Queensland seats filched by the Greens in 2022, voters preferred Labor - even the two secured from the LNP, Brisbane and Ryan. Nationally, the polls show a busy and productive Labor trailing Dutton's detail-light rhetorical assault over cost of living and immigration. The hardline Queenslander is a more effective political communicator than even his own colleagues thought when they overlooked him in 2018. In 2025, Labor remains the narrow favourite. But its hardheads recognise that no opposition leader is unelectable, no historical precedent immutable, and no seat lead impregnable. Mark Kenny is The Canberra Times' political analyst and a professor at the ANU's Australian Studies Institute. He hosts the Democracy Sausage podcast. He writes a column every Sunday. Mark Kenny is The Canberra Times' political analyst and a professor at the ANU's Australian Studies Institute. He hosts the Democracy Sausage podcast. He writes a column every Sunday. Advertisement Sign up for our newsletter to stay up to date. We care about the protection of your data. Read our . AdvertisementThe Fine Gael leader was asked about the controversy in the first question posed during the second and final TV leaders’ debate of Ireland’s General Election campaign. Mr Harris apologised over the weekend for his handling of the discussion with Charlotte Fallon while canvassing in Kanturk in Co Cork on Friday evening. The Taoiseach was accused of dismissing concerns that Ms Fallon raised about Government support for the disability sector during the exchange filmed by RTE in a supermarket. Mr Harris rang Ms Fallon on Saturday and said he unreservedly apologised for the way he treated her, however focus has since shifted to Fine Gael’s interactions with the national broadcaster about the social media video. At the outset of Tuesday’s TV debate, co-host Miriam O’Callaghan directly asked the Fine Gael leader whether a member of his party contacted RTE to ask for the clip to be taken down. “I have no knowledge of that whatsoever, because this clip was entirely appropriate,” said Mr Harris. “It was a very important moment on the campaign. “And RTE and indeed many media outlets have been with me throughout the campaign, covering many interactions that I’ve had with many, many people right across this country.” The Taoiseach said the approach by his team member was part of the “normal contact that happens between party politics and broadcasters on a daily basis”. Mr Harris’s partner-in-government in the last coalition, Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin, said he was not aware of the approach to RTE by Fine Gael. “I didn’t realise this had happened,” he said. “I think Simon has given his explanation to it. I’m not sure it’s as normal or as usual. I just get on with it every day. But, again, I think, you know, I’m not au fait with the details behind all of this, or the background to it. “The video didn’t come down, and it was seen by many, many people. “And I think it illustrates that out there, there are a lot of people suffering in our society. “Notwithstanding the progress we’ve made as a country, a lot of people are facing a lot of individual challenges, and our job as public representatives and as leaders in travelling the country is to listen to people, hear their cases, to understand the challenges that they are going through in their lives. “And when we go about in election campaigns, we have to open up ourselves to criticism and to people calling us to account.” Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald had earlier in the day described reports of the Fine Gael approach to RTE as “chilling”. However, at the start of the debate, she was asked about a media-focused issue related to her own party, namely the controversial manifesto proposal for an independent expert review of RTE’s objectivity in its coverage of the war in Gaza and other international conflicts. Mr Harris previously branded the proposal a “dog whistle to conspiracy theorists” while Mr Martin said it was a “dangerous departure”. Ms McDonald defended the idea during the RTE Prime Time debate on Tuesday. “Politics and politicians should not try to influence editorial decisions or try and have clips taken down because they are inconvenient to them,” she said. “There has to be distance, there has to be objectivity. But I would say I am struck by the very defensive reaction from some to this (the review proposal). “The BBC, for example, a peer review looked at their coverage on migration. Politicians didn’t put their hands on it, and rightly so. “I think in a world where we have to rely on quality information, especially from the national broadcaster, which is in receipt of very substantial public funding, that has to be the gold standard of reliability. I think peer reviews like that are healthy.”

Topline President-elect Donald Trump is expected to name former economic adviser Kevin Hassett to head the National Economic Council, according to multiple reports, as Trump has filled out most of his key cabinet positions. Key Facts Get Forbes Breaking News Text Alerts: We’re launching text message alerts so you'll always know the biggest stories shaping the day’s headlines. Text “Alerts” to (201) 335-0739 or sign up here . National Economic Council Director: Likely Kevin Hassett Trump is expected to appoint Kevin Hassett to lead the National Economic Council, giving him significant sway over policy decisions surrounding trade, taxes and deregulation, Bloomberg reported Tuesday, citing unnamed sources familiar with the selection process. The Wall Street Journal also cited anonymous sources who said Hassett is the front-runner among several contenders, including former U.S. trade representative Robert Lighthizer, Goldman Sachs exec Jim Donovan and former Trump trade advisor Peter Navarro. Hassett, who led the Council of Economic Advisers during Trump’s first term, recently expressed some skepticism about some of Trump’s economic proposals, telling Goldman Sachs last month Trump’s proposal to reduce the corporate tax rate to 15% was unlikely to net the same “dynamic effects” as the 2017 Tax Cut and Jobs Act, and Trump’s tariffs proposals would likely require legislation, Politico reported . Hassett also told Goldman that Federal Reserve leadership should be “neutral” from the administration and said “suspicions” about Trump’s desire for coordination between the Fed and the White House in setting interest rates “should be taken seriously.” Treasury Secretary: Scott Bessent Hedge fund executive Scott Bessent is Trump’s pick for treasury secretary. Bessent—who spoke recently with Forbes—had long been seen as a top choice for the role, especially as it was reported Trump was leaning toward someone with Wall Street experience. Bessent is the founder of Key Square Management, a hedge fund that had less than $600 million in assets under management at the end of last year, and worked for Democratic megadonor George Soros for years before that. Bessent donated about $3 million to Trump and other Republican causes this election season and previously said Trump was “very sophisticated on economic policy.” Bessent is known for being pro-tariff—tariffs are at the center of Trump’s economic policies—and called the import taxes a “negotiating tool with our trading partners” in a Fox News column last week. If confirmed, Bessent would make history as the first Senate-confirmed LGBTQ+ Republican Cabinet member. Attorney General: Pam Bondi Trump announced former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi as his pick to lead the Justice Department—elevating an ally shortly after former Rep. Matt Gaetz’s withdrawal. Bondi served as Florida’s top lawyer from 2011 to 2019, and later joined Trump’s defense team in his first Senate impeachment trial in 2020. She also served on a Trump-era commission on opioids and drug addiction. Attorney general is one of the most high-profile and highly anticipated appointments, as Trump has fiercely criticized the Justice Department for prosecuting him and is expected to drastically change its makeup—and possibly push for retribution against his opponents. In a Truth Social post , Trump said Bondi will “refocus the DOJ to its intended purpose of fighting Crime, and Making America Safe Again.” Secretary Of Defense: Pete Hegseth Trump selected Pete Hegseth as his secretary of defense, praising his status as a combat veteran and role as a co-host on Fox & Friends Weekend. Revelations subsequently emerged that Hegseth was accused of sexually assaulting a woman at a Monterey, California, hotel in 2017. The Monterey Police Department confirmed in a statement that it investigated the incident, but did not bring charges. Hegseth has denied the allegations through his attorney, Timothy Parlatore, who told multiple outlets last week he paid his accuser a settlement to avoid a lawsuit over the matter. Health And Human Services Secretary: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Trump nominated Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Health and Human Services Department, making good on his promise to give Kennedy broad leeway over public health. Kennedy, who ran for the Democratic nomination then as an independent candidate before dropping out and endorsing Trump, espouses debunked views on public health—including skepticism about the efficacy of childhood vaccines and the Covid-19 vaccine. He has also advocated for removing fluoride from public water, an idea Trump said he as open to. As HHS secretary, Kennedy would oversee 13 public health-related agencies, and has expressed plans to upend many of them, telling an audience at a conference in November he would halt infectious disease studies at the National Institutes of Health if given a role in the Trump administration. “I’m going to say to NIH scientists, God bless you all . . . thank you for your public service,” NBC reported. The surprise selection drew criticism from many Democrats, and some Republicans expressed wariness about the pick. Trump’s former Vice President Mike Pence spoke against Kennedy as the pick to lead HHS in a statement and urged Senate Republicans to reject the nomination, citing Kennedy’s support of abortion rights. Secretary Of State: Marco Rubio Trump nominated Sen. Marco Rubio , R-Fla., as secretary of state. Rubio and Trump feuded when they both ran for president in 2016, but the two smoothed over their relationship during Trump’s most recent White House run. Rubio frequently campaigned for Trump and was said to be in the running to be his vice presidential pick. Some of Rubio’s foreign policy stances break with Trump, including his co-sponsorship of legislation last year that would prohibit a president from exiting NATO without congressional approval. Rubio would be the first Latino to hold the position, which is subject to Senate confirmation. Forbes estimated Rubio’s net worth at over $1 million—significantly less than some other members of Trump’s inner circle, but a jump since 2015, when he was worth just $100,000. Director Of National Intelligence: Tulsi Gabbard Trump announced Tulsi Gabbard will serve as his Director of National Intelligence, a role that puts her at the head of the U.S. intelligence community. Gabbard is a former Democratic representative from Hawaii and a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, perhaps best-known for clashing with Kamala Harris on the debate stage in 2019. She left the party in 2022 and became an independent, before endorsing Trump in August and announcing she had joined the Republican Party. A critic of U.S. military interventions, Gabbard has drawn intense scrutiny for her foreign policy views, including for meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in 2017 . Education Secretary: Linda Mcmahon Trump tapped former WWE CEO Linda McMahon as secretary of the Department of Education in an announcement Tuesday. McMahon is Trump’s transition co-chair alongside Lutnick and served as the administrator of the Small Business Administration from 2017 to 2019. The nomination came after Lutnick was picked as commerce secretary over McMahon, who was “privately frustrated” she was not offered the position before Lutnick was tapped for it, Semafor reported, citing two unnamed people familiar with the matter. McMahon is also the America First Policy Institute’s board chair, helping lead the think tank that has raised millions in support of Trump, according to CNN . Commerce Secretary: Howard Lutnick Howard Lutnick is Trump’s pick for commerce secretary, Trump confirmed Tuesday—picking him for the commerce role instead of treasury secretary. Trump, in a statement, called Lutnick “the embodiment of resilience in the face of unspeakable tragedy,” referencing his charitable contributions to 9/11 families after 658 Cantor Fitzgerald employees, including Lutnick’s brother, died in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, while Lutnick was CEO. Lutnick, who rebuilt the company after 9/11, has spent his entire career at Cantor Fitzgerald and became president and CEO of the financial services firm at the age of 29. His special purposes acquisition company, Cantor Fitzgerald Acquisition Corp., took the Rumble video platform popular among right-wing influencers public in 2022. As commerce secretary, Lutnick will play a role in implementing Trump’s plans for steeper tariffs and he has expressed broad support for the proposal. Lutnick was previously under consideration for treasury secretary—typically a more prominent Cabinet job—and earned support from Musk and Kennedy, but Trump ultimately turned his attention to other candidates after he reportedly became annoyed with Lutnick’s aggressive campaign for the treasury role. Homeland Security Secretary: Kristi Noem Trump picked South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem for the role of secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. Noem is a long-time Trump loyalist who was believed be a contender for Vice President. The appointee will be essential in carrying out Trump’s aggressive immigration plans, in addition to the agency’s duties surrounding cybersecurity, antiterrorism and emergency response. Agriculture Secretary: Brooke Rollins Trump announced Brooke Rollins as his pick for agriculture secretary. Rollins served as a policy advisor during Trump’s first administration and is the president of the America First Policy Institute, a think tank founded by former Trump administration officials that has advocated against foreign ownership of U.S. farmland. She was reportedly considered for White House chief of staff before Susie Wiles was named to the role. Centers For Medicare And Medicaid Services Administrator: Mehmet Oz Trump announced Tuesday that Mehmet Oz , the celebrity doctor who lost his 2022 Senate bid to Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., will fill the role. Oz will work closely with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who Trump announced last week as his pick for Health and Human Services secretary. Oz’s rise to fame is largely tied to his frequent appearances on the Oprah Winfrey show in the early 2000s and his own subsequent daytime talk show. He’s accused of espousing questionable medical claims, including promoting the debunked theory that the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine could treat Covid-19, and pushing so-called miracle weight loss products unsupported by scientific research. Trump endorsed Oz in his 2022 Senate campaign. Chief Of Staff: Susie Wiles Trump named his campaign co-manager Susie Wiles chief of staff two days after his election win, marking his first major administrative pick. Wiles will be the first woman to hold the position. Department Of Government Efficiency: Elon Musk And Vivek Ramaswamy Trump announced Elon Musk , the world’s wealthiest person, will run a new Department of Government Efficiency (or “DOGE”) alongside investor and former Republican primary candidate Vivek Ramaswamy . Trump said in a statement the department—which has not yet been created—will offer “advice and guidance from outside of Government” and focus on “making changes to the Federal Bureaucracy with an eye on efficiency,” including through spending and regulatory cuts. Musk, a vocal Trump backer who donated over $100 million to a pro-Trump super PAC, has pitched the department in the past, seemingly naming it after the meme cryptocurrency dogecoin. Office Of Management And Budget Director: Russell Vought Trump nominated Russell Vought as director of the Office of Budget and Management, potentially marking his second time in the role. Vought was the office’s director from 2020 to 2021 after serving as deputy director and acting director. Vought authored a chapter in the controversial Project 2025 policy agenda on the Executive Office of the President of the United States and will be in charge of overseeing the White House budget and implementation of Trump’s policies throughout the executive branch. He also reportedly said in secret camera footage published by the Centre for Climate Reporting that Trump “blessed” Project 2025 despite distancing himself from it on the campaign trail. Vought is expected to push for policy restructuring that provides more power to the president. Homeland Security Adviser And Deputy Chief Of Staff For Policy: Stephen Miller Trump announced Stephen Miller as White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy, plus the additional role of homeland security adviser. Miller was a senior adviser to Trump during his first administration and one of the architects of some of his most controversial immigration policies, including his family separation program. Border Czar: Tom Homan Trump appointed his former Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Tom Homan to newly created role, he announced , as Trump plans a mass deportation of undocumented migrants during his second term. Cdc Director: Dave Weldon, Fda Commissioner: Marty Makary, Surgeon General: Janette Nesheiwat Trump announced former Rep. Dave Weldon , R-Fla.—who served in Congress from 1995 to 2009—as CDC director, and tapped Marty Makary , who became known for opposing vaccine mandates during the COVID-19 pandemic, as FDA commissioner. He also named former Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat as his pick for surgeon general. Secretary Of Labor: Lori Chavez-Deremer Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer , R-Ore., was nominated as Trump’s secretary of labor. She was elected to the House of Representatives in 2022 to represent Oregon’s 5th Congressional District and recently lost her reelection bid. Senior Director For Counterterrorism: Sebastian Gorka Sebastian Gorka was appointed as the deputy assistant to the president and senior director for counterterrorism. He previously served as strategist to the president in the first Trump administration and is the host of his own radio show, “America First with Sebastian Gorka.” Hud Secretary: Scott Turner Trump named former NFL player Scott Turner as his pick for secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Turner served in the first Trump administration as the executive director of Trump’s White House Opportunity and Revitalization Council. National Security Adviser: Mike Waltz Trump appointed Rep. Mike Waltz , R-Fla., to serve as his national security adviser. In recent months, Waltz—a former Army Green Beret—has frequently criticized China, urged NATO members to pay more for defense and said he expects Trump to push Ukraine and Russia toward a negotiated end to the war in Ukraine. Interior Secretary: Doug Burgum (and Head Of New National Energy Council) Trump nominated North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum as secretary of the interior. If confirmed by the Senate, he’ll be responsible for managing vast swaths of federally owned land, administering national parks and handling oil and gas drilling on federal property—which Trump has vowed to ramp up . Trump also tapped Burgum as chairman of the new National Energy Council, which will cut down on regulations and “oversee the path to U.S. ENERGY DOMINANCE,” according to Trump . The position will also provide Burgum a seat on the National Security Council. First elected North Dakota governor in 2016, Burgum briefly ran against Trump in the 2024 GOP primaries, but dropped out and endorsed Trump. A tech executive and investor by trade, Burgum previously ran Great Plains Software, remaining at the company after it was acquired by Microsoft. Last year, Forbes estimated his net worth at at least $100 million. Energy Secretary: Chris Wright Chris Wright , chief executive of the oilfield services group Liberty Energy, was named Trump’s nominee for secretary of energy. Wright has argued against climate change’s role in causing extreme weather events, saying in a video posted to LinkedIn last year “there is no climate crisis, and we’re not in the midst of an energy transition either.” He later disputed he was “[fighting] climate science,” despite saying the claims he made were “correct.” Transportation Secretary: Sean Duffy Trump nominated former Rep. Sean Duffy , R-Wisc., as secretary of transportation, lauding his time in Congress and his role as a member of the House Financial Services Committee. Following his resignation from Congress in 2019, Duffy registered as a lobbyist and continued spending campaign funds on Trump’s D.C. hotel. The campaign spent more than $22,000 at Trump’s D.C. hotel between 2017 and 2020, $17,000 of which was spent in a single day in July 2019. Duffy is a co-host of Fox Business’ “The Bottom Line” and has contributed to Fox News since 2020. He is married to “Fox & Friends Weekend” co-host Rachel Campos-Duffy. Veterans Affairs Secretary: Doug Collins Trump picked former Rep. Doug Collins , R-Ga., as his secretary for veterans affairs. Collins served as a congressman from 2013 to 2021, and was known as a vocal backer of Trump in the chamber during his first administration. He is also a chaplain in the United States Air Force Reserve Command. Collins vowed to “streamline and cut regulations in the VA, root out corruption, and ensure every veteran receives the benefits they've earned.” The former congressman was deployed to Iraq in 2008 as a member of the Air Force’s 94th Airlift Wing. Cia Director: John Ratlciffe Former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe will serve as CIA director. A former Texas congressman, Ratcliffe served as the director of national intelligence from 2020 to 2021 and acted as Trump’s primary intelligence adviser during his last presidency. During his time as director of national intelligence, Ratcliffe declassified unverified Russian intelligence information that claimed Hillary Clinton approved a plan to link Trump to Russia and the Democratic National Committee cyberattacks in 2016. Democrats criticized Ratcliffe’s decision to publicly release the information, alleging he was politicizing unverified information to aid Trump. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator: Lee Zeldin Trump tapped former Rep. Lee Zeldin , R-N.Y., to lead the EPA, citing his “very strong legal background” and calling him “a true fighter for America First policies” in a statement. Zeldin—a Trump ally who ran for New York governor two years ago—“will ensure fair and swift deregulatory decisions that will be enacted in a way to unleash the power of American business while at the same time maintaining the highest environmental standards,” the statement said. Fcc Chair: Brendan Carr Trump named Brendan Carr to chair the Federal Communications Commission. Carr has served as one of the FCC’s five commissioners since 2017, when Trump first appointed him to the agency. He’s known as a critic of big tech companies, writing a chapter of the controversial Project 2025 agenda—which Trump has broadly disavowed—that argued the FCC should narrow the immunity enjoyed by tech platforms and require companies to be transparent about their content moderation decisions. He’s also used his platform at the FCC to back Musk. He’ll take over the FCC as Trump pushes the agency to revoke the licenses of broadcast TV stations whose coverage he claims is unfair—though that could be very difficult in practice . Un Ambassador: Elise Stefanik Trump nominated GOP Conference Chair Rep. Elise Stefanik , R-N.Y., for the United Nations ambassador role. Stefanik is known as a staunch Trump ally. Special Envoy To The Middle East: Steven C. Witkoff Trump tapped Steven Witkoff , a GOP donor and real estate investor, for special envoy to the Middle East. Witkoff is chairman of the University of Miami Business School Real Estate Advisory Board and the CEO of Witkoff, a real estate firm he founded in 1997. He is also a longtime friend of Trump’s and one of the president-elect’s golf partners . Witkoff was with Trump during the apparent second assassination attempt on his life, telling NBC that Secret Service agents dived on Trump and got him off his Florida golf course in under 20 seconds. U.s. Nato Ambassador: Matthew Whitaker Trump announced on Wednesday Matthew Whitaker will serve as the official U.S. representative to NATO. Whitaker was the former U.S. acting attorney general appointed after former Attorney General Jeff Sessions resigned and before former Attorney General William Barr was sworn in during Trump’s first term. Whitaker oversaw the DOJ during former Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and was heavily scrutinized by Democrats over whether he sought to interfere in the probe on Trump’s behalf, allegations he denied. Whitaker frequently appears on Fox News as an advocate for Trump, defending his decision to tap Gaetz as attorney general last week and broadly criticizing the Justice Department over its various investigations into Trump’s conduct. Ambassador To Israel: Mike Huckabee Trump announced former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee as his envoy to Israel last week, touting his military service as he served in the Army Special Forces for 27 years. Huckabee is a staunch supporter of Israel and has criticized the Biden administration’s calls for a cease-fire with Hamas. Huckabee has advocated for Israel to annex parts of the West Bank, which Israel occupied in 1967, and has backed Israeli settlers in the territory. A former Southern Baptist pastor, Huckabee regularly leads evangelicals on visits to Israel. White House Press Secretary: Karoline Leavitt Karoline Leavitt , the Trump campaign’s national press secretary, will serve as White House Press Secretary once the president-elect assumes his office. Leavitt, 27, was an assistant press secretary during Trump’s first presidency. She also won the Republican primary in New Hampshire's 1st Congressional District in 2022, becoming the second Gen Z candidate to win a House primary . White House Communications Director: Steven Cheung Trump picked his campaign spokesman, Steven Cheung , to serve as his communications director at the White House. Cheung was the director of communications for the president-elect’s 2024 presidential campaign and served as director of strategic response during Trump’s last term, after working in communications for the Ultimate Fighting Championship previously. Other White House Jobs Other Justice Department Jobs Key Background Trump decamped to Mar-a-Lago after his win, holding meetings with his inner circle, administration hopefuls and transition team to craft his second term agenda and build out his staff. Trump is shaping his second-term agenda with the help of several right-wing groups, his closest allies and billionaire backers. Musk, who has been spotted on numerous occasions alongside Trump since his election, is among those who appear to be influencing Trump’s policy and personnel decisions. Lutnick is also overseeing a team making recommendations for personnel picks and vetting potential candidates, and Miller is expected to play a key role in making the final decisions. The right-wing think tank America First Policy Institute is reportedly the primary driver of Trump’s transition plans and has been crafting possible executive actions for Trump once he takes office. The organization is chaired by McMahon and led by former Trump Domestic Policy Counsel Director Brook Rollins. Further Reading What We Know About Trump’s Potential Cabinet—With RFK Jr. And Elon Musk Among The Candidates (Forbes) Who Will Help Shape Trump’s Policy Agenda? Here Are The Key Groups And Players (Forbes) Stephen Miller Will Reportedly Lead Trump’s Policy Agenda—Here’s Who Else Could Help Him (Forbes)Victoria Mary Clarke’s heartbreaking tribute to Shane MacGowan on anniversary

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