Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Trump nominee to lead whistleblower office withdraws after racist texts – as it happened

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Paul Ingrassia, Trump nominee to lead ethics office, withdraws after racist texts

Paul Ingrassia, Donald Trump’s nominee to lead a government ethics office, just announced on social media that he is withdrawing from consideration, after the publication of racist text messages caused Republican senators to say they would not vote to confirm him.

“I will be withdrawing myself from Thursday’s HSGAC hearing to lead the Office of Special Counsel because unfortunately I do not have enough Republican votes at this time,” Ingrassia wrote on X, using the acronym for the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee. “I appreciate the overwhelming support that I have received throughout this process and will continue to serve President Trump and this administration to Make America Great Again!”

Ingrassia currently serves as Trump’s White House liaison for the department of homeland security, where a colleague accused him of sexual harassment earlier this year. Ingrassia denies wrongdoing.

According to texts reviewed by Politico, Ingrassia, a lawyer and former pro-Trump blogger, wrote last year that Martin Luther King Jr “was the 1960s George Floyd and his ‘holiday’ should be ended and tossed into the seventh circle of hell where it belongs”.

He also used a slur for Black people in a text arguing that all Black holidays should be “eviscerated” and admitted “I do have a Nazi streak in me.”

The Office of Special Counsel, the agency Trump picked Ingrassia to lead, investigates discrimination complaints and other claims of wrongdoing by federal employees, and enforces the Hatch Act, which bars government employees from engaging in certain partisan political activities, and has been widely flouted by the Trump administration.

Support from Republican senators for Ingrassia’s confirmation hemorrhaged over the past 24 hours, with Ron Johnson and Rick Scott saying on Monday that they would not vote for him over the texts.

In addition to attack on Black Americans, Ingrassia reportedly also wrote in 2024: “Never trust a chinaman or Indian”.

On Tuesday, Trump was joined by prominent Indian Americans, including his FBI director, Kash Patel, to celebrate Diwali in the Oval Office.

Man outside building
Ingrassia in January announces the release of two Capitol rioters from the DC detention facility after Donald Trump pardoned over 1,500 people charged with crimes relating to the attack. Photograph: Pete Kiehart/ Washington Post/Getty Images
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Key events

Closing summary

This concludes our live coverage of the second Trump administration for the day, but we will be back on Wednesday. Here are the latest developments:

  • Paul Ingrassia, Donald Trump’s nominee to lead a government ethics office, withdrew from consideration, after the publication of racist text messages caused Republican senators to say they would not vote to confirm him.

  • Arizona’s attorney general is suing the House speaker, Mike Johnson, over his refusal to swear in Adelita Grijalva, a Democrat who won a congressional special election in September.

  • Trump seemed to confirm a report that he is seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation for the thwarted legal cases against him. “I guess they probably owe me a lot of money for that,” he told reporters.

  • Despite recently announcing a summit in Budapest, there are now no plans for Trump to meet with Vladmir Putin “in the immediate future”, a White House official told the Guardian.

  • Trump repeated his wildly false claim that the city of Portland, Oregon is beset by fires started by protesters. “I looked at Portland over the weekend. The place is burning down,” the president claimed, apparently referring to a chemical attack on protesters by federal officers.

  • JD Vance, on a visit to Israel, said that he would not “put an explicit deadline” on Hamas to comply with the key points of the Gaze ceasefire deal.

  • Graham Platner, the Maine oysterman and former US marine campaigning to be the Democrats’ candidate in next year’s US Senate race, “has an anti-Semitic tattoo on his chest” and “knows damn well what it means,” according to one of his close aides who resigned last week.

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