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Todd Young

 
Todd Young Image
Title
Senator
Indiana
Party Affiliation
Republican
2023
2028
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Representative Offices
Address
101 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd
Suite
Suite 110
City/State/Zip
Evansville IN, 47708
Hours
By appointment only
Address
1300 South Harrison Street
Suite
Suite 3161
City/State/Zip
Fort Wayne IN, 46802
Hours
By appointment only
Address
310 E. 96th St.
Suite
Suite 350
City/State/Zip
Indianapolis IN, 46240
Phone
317-226-6700
Address
3602 Northgate Ct
Suite
Suite 15
City/State/Zip
New Albany IN, 47150
Phone
812-542-4820
Hours
8:30am - 4:30pm
Address
212 E. Lincolnway
Suite
Suite 205A
City/State/Zip
Valparaiso IN, 46383
Phone
219-747-7780
News
03/11/2025 --eastbaytimes
A Justice Department attorney details how she was fired, one day after refusing to go along with a request from her bosses to recommend that Gibson's gun rights be restored.
03/07/2025 --theadvocate
Baton Rouge Police say they are preparing warrants to arrest two additional suspects in connection with last week's hazing death of Southern University junior engineering student Caleb Wilson, 20.
03/07/2025 --theepochtimes
‘The truth is, I doubt Congress will repeal CHIPS,’ a CHIPS and Science Act opponent, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), told The Epoch Times.
03/07/2025 --kron4
Republican lawmakers are starting to urge President Trump to reverse his decisions to pause U.S. military and intelligence assistance to Ukraine, warning that a prolonged stoppage of U.S. help for the war effort would have a seriously detrimental effect. They say that Trump has the right to temporarily halt weapons shipments to Ukraine to assess [...]
02/25/2025 --theepochtimes
'This legislation will help level the playing field to ensure the United States can outcompete the Chinese Communist Party,' Sen. Todd Young said.
02/24/2025 --reporterherald
Bove's recent moves have spurred intense criticism from legal scholars and former prosecutors.
02/21/2025 --dailycaller
How Senate Sherpa JD Vance Helped Guide MAGA's Favorite Cabinet Picks To Confirmation
02/21/2025 --bangordailynews
The calls escalate an already-heated debate that Donald Trump embraced on the campaign trail over the rights of transgender Americans.
02/13/2025 --thegardenisland
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Senate on Wednesday confirmed Tulsi Gabbard to be the next director of national intelligence in a 52-48 vote that demonstrated President Donald Trump’s political control over Republican lawmakers, and she was sworn in hours later in the Oval Office.
02/12/2025 --eastbaytimes
Gabbard, a military veteran and former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii, was confirmed by a 52-48 vote, with Democrats opposed in the sharply divided Senate where Republicans hold a slim majority. The only "no' vote from a Republican came from Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.
02/12/2025 --axios
The Senate voted Wednesday to confirm Tulsi Gabbard as President Trump's Director of National Intelligence, largely along party lines.Why it matters: It's a big win for the president's team, which worked hard to resuscitate Gabbard's nomination when it faltered earlier this year. The final vote was 52-48, with former Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) the only GOP opponent. "When a nominee's record proves them unworthy of the highest public trust, and when their command of relevant policy falls short of the requirements of their office, the Senate should withhold its consent," McConnell said in a statement after the vote. The big picture: Gabbard proved to be one of Trump's most controversial nominees, and the success of her confirmation was particularly questionable ahead of a committee vote earlier this month.The Senate Intelligence Committee approved Gabbard's nomination Feb. 4 in a razor-thin 9-8 party-line vote.That was after Intel Chair Tom Cotton made a concerted effort to get her through, even enlisting the help of former Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) in swaying two of the panel's skeptical Republicans — Indiana's Todd Young and Maine's Susan Collins.Zoom in: Young announced he would support Gabbard's confirmation in committee after outlining several commitments Gabbard made to win his vote.Those included promising not to seek a pardon for Edward Snowden, regularly updating the Senate Intel committee on her foreign travel and working with the panel to reauthorize Section 702 of FISA.Vice President Vance and billionaire Trump lieutenant Elon Musk also pressed Young to support Gabbard.Zoom out: Gabbard faced tough questioning in her confirmation hearing, repeatedly refusing to call Snowden a traitor.Questions have also been raised about a trip she took to Syria, references she has made to conspiracy theories about U.S. bio labs in Ukraine and her history of questioning the findings of the U.S. intelligence community.Senators voted 52-46 on Monday to limit debate on Gabbard's nomination, paving the way for her confirmation.Go deeper: How Tulsi Gabbard's nomination came roaring back to lifeEditor's note: This story has been updated with additional reporting.
02/12/2025 --unionleader
Tulsi Gabbard, a former U.S. representative with little intelligence experience, was confirmed as the top U.S. spy on Wednesday, as Republicans lined up behind a nominee once seen as among President Donald Trump’s most controversial picks.
02/12/2025 --khou
The only "no" vote from a Republican came from Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.
02/12/2025 --kron4
The Senate voted largely along party lines Wednesday to confirm Tulsi Gabbard to serve as the director of national intelligence, the nation’s top intelligence official, despite strong objections from Democrats and initial misgivings from Republicans who questioned her experience and judgment. The 52-48 vote caps two months of deliberations in the Senate over whether Gabbard, a [...]
02/08/2025 --axios
Elon Musk is enlisting the help of his X army as he seeks to hack away at the U.S. government, responding directly to users who recommend specific cuts and posting an X poll to justify reinstating a staffer who resigned over racist tweets.Why it matters: Now the most powerful bureaucrat in America, Musk is leaning not only on access to sensitive government systems but also on his legions of fervently loyal, often-anonymous X followers as he weighs the fate of billions of dollars in spending.The big picture: Donald Trump broke new ground in his first term by carrying out the nation's business via tweet decrees.Musk, who typically posts between 50 and 100 tweets per day, is taking the bottom-up approach by letting foot soldiers supply suggestions that get seen — and acted on — by his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).Driving the news: Last weekend, Musk elevated posts decrying USAID uses of money in his push to gut the agency. Then on Monday, he declared that Trump "agreed" to shut it down.Media became a target when users initially claimed erroneously that Politico had received millions from USAID. In fact, federal agencies were paying for subscriptions to specialized Politico products.After users shared screenshots highlighting that spending, Musk agreed it was "wasteful." Within a few hours the White House announced the Politico subscriptions were being canceled. DOGE has since announced that subscriptions with the New York Times and other outlets are being scrapped.Targeting the National Endowment for Democracy, Musk solicited ammunition from X users, asking them to "reply to this post listing all the evil things that NED has done."In responding to a user who complained about the IRS's Direct File system, Musk wrote "That group has been deleted." Similarly, he wrote "deleted" in responding to a critical post about one of the General Services Administration's programs.He has been reposting users' screenshots of line items in the government's budget as well.Some of the recommended cuts are hyper-specific. After FlexPort CEO Ryan Petersen tweeted that DOGE should "look into" the U.S. Mint in San Francisco, Musk swiftly replied "noted."The latest: After the WSJ uncovered blatantly racist tweets apparently written by one key DOGE staffer, Marko Elez, the White House announced Elez had resigned.Then X users responding to Musk's poll (including Vice President Vance) overwhelmingly supported reinstating him, and Musk announced he'd be back.A spokesperson for DOGE did not respond to a request for comment.Zoom out: The X activism has extended beyond Musk's cost-cutting mission to law enforcement.Musk found an ally in Ed Martin, a Trump supporter and interim U.S. Attorney of District of Columbia. After a weekend of reports about DOGE staffers' standoffs with Treasury and USAID — with Musk contending it was a crime to identify members of his team — Martin released a letter calling for the protection of DOGE workers.Replying to a post calling for Martin to "look into" progressive commentator Will Stancil, Martin replied, "Thank you. Noted."Friction point: Trump appears on course to getting all of his most controversial Cabinet picks confirmed — with the exception of Matt Gaetz — due in no small part to the pressure campaign waged by Musk and the right-wing digital chorus on X.Senators who had wavered on some of the picks — Sen. Joni Ernst for Pete Hegseth, Sen. Bill Cassidy for Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Sen. Todd Young for Tulsi Gabbard — all came around after being harangued online and inundated with threats of primary campaigns.Flashback: Musk has a history of crowdsourcing ideas for his businesses, and of posting prolifically on Twitter long before he bought it.Now, his posting habit is intertwined with his mission of slashing billions in government funding and waging digital war on Trump's behalf.
02/05/2025 --axios
Senate Intel Chair Tom Cotton found a surprise ally in former Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) to help resuscitate Tulsi Gabbard's nomination.The former Democratic senator approached Cotton and was deployed to help sway Sens. Todd Young (R-Ind.) and Susan Collins (R-Maine) into "yes" votes today, sources tell Axios.Why it matters: Cotton, the hawkish Arkansan who is No. 3 in GOP leadership, worked all the angles on Gabbard.He worked with Vice President Vance — who's been a crucial influence on undecided senators — Trump adviser Jason Miller and others on Gabbard's team. Cotton told Trump last year he could get Gabbard confirmed, Semafor's Burgess Everett first reported Tuesday.Cotton leaned hard on the White House to persuade, not pressure, arguing that an overly combative approach could be counterproductive for people like Young. (That didn't stop MAGA posters from trying over the weekend.)Cotton tapped former NSA adviser Robert O'Brien to whip other members of the committee.Inside the room: Cotton, Sens. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) and former Intel Chair Richard Burr (R-N.C.) huddled with Gabbard for over an hour ahead of last week's committee hearing trying to make sure concerns were addressed.Gabbard's hearing was anything but smooth, clearly frustrating Republicans who wanted to hear her call Edward Snowden a traitor.But she still won the Senate Intel Committee's recommendation on a party-line vote.Zoom in: Cotton worked closely alongside Vance, the White House legislative affairs office and Gabbard's sherpas, keeping the White House updated on the status of the nomination.As chair of the Senate Republican Conference, Cotton transformed the office — and its X account — into a war room for Gabbard.He dove into details too, helping Gabbard fill out required questionnaires and prepare for her high-stakes hearing. When Gabbard made a helpful comment during her closed-door prep, Cotton encouraged her team to get it out there, resulting in a Newsweek op-ed.The bottom line: There still could be other no votes in the Senate, most notably GOP Sens. John Curtis of Utah, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.But Senate GOP leadership and the White House feel confident with Young on board that Gabbard will be confirmed.
02/04/2025 --kron4
Tulsi Gabbard and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Tuesday cleared crucial hurdles toward winning Senate confirmation, handing President Trump a key win as he looks for an early display of loyalty from GOP lawmakers. Gabbard and Kennedy overcame high-stakes committee votes that went down to the wire in their bids to lead the U.S. Intelligence [...]
02/01/2025 --benzinga
The Trump administration is mounting an aggressive push this weekend to secure Senate support for Tulsi Gabbard's nomination as Director of National Intelligence (DNI), according to Axios. With the Senate Intelligence Committee vote looming, officials are scrambling to ensure Gabbard, a former Democratic congresswoman and military veteran, clears the crucial first hurdle in her confirmation process.Senate Republican Conference Chairman Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) has transformed the conference's official X account into a makeshift Gabbard "war room," underscoring the urgency of the administration's efforts. To advance her nomination to the full Senate, Gabbard needs to secure every Republican vote on the Intelligence Committee, though skepticism among some GOP senators threatens to derail her path. The committee includes nine Republicans and eight Democrats.What's The Problem? ...Full story available on Benzinga.com
02/01/2025 --rawstory
Officials in President Donald Trump's administration are reportedly "scrambling" in an all-hands-on-deck operation this weekend to gin up support for Director of National Intelligence nominee Tulsi Gabbard.Axios reported recently that Senate Republican Conference chairman Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) has turned the conference's official X account into an unofficial Tulsi Gabbard "war room," in an effort to get her across the crucial first hurdle in her confirmation battle. Gabbard will need every Republican vote in the Senate Intelligence Committee to advance her nomination to the full Senate, and more than one Republican has indicated hesitancy in their support of Trump's pick to lead the United States' 18 spy agencies.According to the outlet, the Trump administration is focusing particularly on convincing Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.) to back the former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii and military veteran. During Gabbard's confirmation hearing this week, Young and other senators confronted her on her refusal to call National Security Agency contractor-turned-whistleblower Edward Snowden a "traitor."READ MORE: 'She lied to us': Ex-Gabbard staffers speak out about 'insane' meeting with Syrian dictatorTrump is reportedly considering reaching out to Republicans on the Intelligence Committee to assure them that he would not pardon Snowden — who was granted political asylum in Russia by President Vladimir Putin — in order to ensure they vote for Gabbard's confirmation. One unnamed Trump advisor told Axios that "the president will have those conversations" if necessary."We feel OK about Tulsi's chances," an anonymous senior White House official told the outlet. "But we want to feel better."Sens. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) and Susan Collins (R-Maine) are among the other senators that could vote with Democrats against Gabbard's confirmation. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) already suggested that he wouldn't bring Gabbard's nomination before the full Senate if she failed to win over all nine Republicans on the Intelligence Committee. But MAGA activists are already promising to back primary challenges against any Senate Republican who votes against Gabbard."We are 100% serious," said Andrew Kolvet, who is a spokesperson for Turning Point Action. "GOP senators in red states will open themselves up to well-funded, well-organized primary challenges if they stand in the way of confirming the Cabinet the president wants and the American people voted for."READ MORE: 'Email Putin all our war plans': Experts blast Trump for picking 'Russian spy' Gabbard as intel chiefClick here to read Axios' report in full.
02/01/2025 --axios
President Trump and his allies —including the online right, Vice President Vance and Sen. Tom Cotton — are scrambling to try to boost Tulsi Gabbard's nomination as director of national intelligence.Why it matters: The MAGA machine that helped Pete Hegseth narrowly win confirmation as defense secretary last week is now focused on Gabbard. Trump's team believes she faces the most headwinds of any of his current Cabinet nominees."We feel OK about Tulsi's chances," one senior White House official told Axios. "But we want to feel better."State of play: Trump plans to start making calls to Republican senators on the Intelligence Committee, where Gabbard faced tough questions Thursday about her past views questioning surveillance tactics and defending Edward Snowden. Losing just one GOP vote on the committee — which includes nine Republicans and eight Democrats — could sink her confirmation.Gabbard refused to call Snowden a "traitor" for leaking secret intelligence documents before ending up in Russia. That appeared to bother Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), whom Trump's team is most worried about. But Gabbard seemed to please another swing-vote Republican, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, by saying she wouldn't ask Trump to pardon Snowden. Collins' reaction was a relief to Trump's team because of her penchant for bucking the president more than most other GOP senators.If that sounded like a deal in the making, Trump's team wasn't ruling it out."The president isn't really talking about pardoning Snowden, but if that's a guarantee they want to get Tulsi confirmed, the president will have those conversations," the White House adviser said.Catch up quick: Trump has been in a feud with the U.S. intelligence community since his first administration. He sees Gabbard — a former Democratic House member from Hawaii with similar disdain for the so-called "Deep State" — as a disruptor and change agent.Trump's Day 1 executive order, "Ending the Weaponization of the Federal Government" specifically calls on the director of national intelligence to "review the activities of the intelligence community over the last 4 years and identify any instances" of political prosecutions and investigations.Zoom in: Vance and his team worked closely with Gabbard on her presentation to the committee. And Vance, a former Ohio senator, has been Trump's go-to representative to the Senate for all of his prominent nominees.Cotton, the Arkansas senator who chairs the intelligence panel, committed to getting Gabbard the votes she needed. The two are friends from their days serving in the House.The Senate Republican Conference, also led by Cotton, has turned its X page into a pro-Gabbard "war room," an operative involved in the process noted.Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said it's unlikely Gabbard would get a full vote by the Senate if she doesn't win a majority of the votes on the Intelligence Committee. Zoom in: Many MAGA diehards outside of the administration also are pushing for Gabbard because they see her — and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump's Health and Human Services nominee and another former Democrat — as representing how Trump is growing his coalition beyond the GOP.Gabbard and Kennedy were dubbed "Blue MAGA" in Trump world because of the key roles they played on the campaign trail, touring the country on Trump's behalf. Donald Trump Jr. also has been involved in touting the pair. He told Axios in a written statement that both are "highly qualified" and are "also vital to the GOP's new governing coalition." "Unfortunately, there are still a few establishment Republicans in the Beltway who don't seem to get that," he said. "I think they are severely underestimating the backlash that would occur from our voters if either of them were blocked from being confirmed." Tucker Carlson, Judicial Watch's Tom Fitton, and Turning Point Action's Charlie Kirk also are pushing Gabbard on social media."We are 100% serious," Turning Point Action spokesman Andrew Kolvet said in a statement. "GOP senators in red states will open themselves up to well-funded, well-organized primary challenges if they stand in the way of confirming the Cabinet the president wants and the American people voted for."
01/28/2025 --dailycaller
'Gabbard's nomination is in the greatest peril'
01/27/2025 --starherald
Kristi Noem’s heated rhetoric on immigration belies a stark economic reality in her own state: With unemployment at 1.9% — the lowest in the country — South Dakota has grown increasingly dependent on the same migrants she may be tasked...
01/27/2025 --kron4
Republicans are cautioning that Tulsi Gabbard’s path to confirmation to lead the U.S. Intelligence apparatus is narrowing as she seemingly has trouble winning over key GOP senators. Gabbard, along with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Kash Patel, are set for their high-stakes confirmation hearings this week as senators face some of President Trump’s most controversial [...]
01/24/2025 --nbcnews
President Donald Trump told reporters Friday that he was "surprised" Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins — both moderates and sometime critics of Trump — planned to vote against former Fox News host Pete Hegseth's nomination to lead the Defense Department.
01/23/2025 --mercurynews
Gov. Kristi Noem’s heated rhetoric on immigration belies a stark economic reality in her own state.
01/16/2025 --rollcall
Scott Bessent, President-elect Donald Trump's intended nominee for Treasury secretary, testifies during his Senate Finance Committee confirmation hearing on Thursday.
01/15/2025 --nbcnews
Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., has been telling potential donors and Florida political players that he is running for governor in 2026.
01/15/2025 --nypost
The only reason hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans living outside Venezuela left was because they realized President Biden would let them into the US unchecked.
01/08/2025 --kron4
Colleges and universities are preparing for new legal and political territory as President-elect Trump returns to office. Concerns for international students, GOP attacks on higher education and increased protests on campus are just some of the worries on administrators' minds. “I think we're obviously preparing," said Todd Wolfson, national president of American Association of University [...]
01/07/2025 --rawstory
A CNN panel on Tuesday predicted that President-elect Donald Trump was likely to pardon even the most violent rioters who stormed the United States Capitol on his behalf on January 6th, 2021.Republican strategist Brad Todd began the discussion by saying he only believed that Trump would pardon low-level January 6th offenders rather than violent offenders such as members of the Proud Boys."I think if he were to pardon Stewart Rhodes or Enrique Tarrio or any of the instigators... I think those pardons will be controversial and they should be," he said.But CNN political analyst Alex Thompson, however, seemed much more certain that Trump would pardon even the most violent MAGA rioters.ALSO READ: Trump intel advisor Devin Nunes still dismisses Russian election meddling as a 'hoax'"There is this sort of feeling on many issues within the Trump orbit of invincibility," he explained. "And there's definitely a feeling of exuberance, just, 'Screw it, let's just do everything we said we were going to do.'"CNN analyst Zolan Kanno-Youngs shared Thompson's sentiment."The easiest way to do a pardon action quickly, like on Day 1, is to issue a sweeping categorical pardon," he said. "So if you're going to start to disperse it and look at each individual crime, it's going to take longer and now you start to have pressure from the base after you've committed to doing this early on."Watch the video below or at this link.- YouTubewww.youtube.com
01/03/2025 --nhpr
Jane Young was nominated by President Biden in 2022 to lead the state’s federal prosecutor's office.
12/26/2024 --fox5sandiego
Hudson Meek had roles in "Baby Driver," "MacGyver," and more.
12/23/2024 --huffpost
Republicans who oppose Trump's Cabinet nominees could find themselves with a lump of coal — or a primary challenger — in the next Congress.
12/14/2024 --santacruzsentinel
“It's amazing what just a few new people in your life can do.”
12/11/2024 --nevadaappeal
Carson City history from the Nevada Appeal archive
12/10/2024 --theepochtimes
The White House has announced President Joe Biden's intent to veto a judicial expansion bill, citing rushed timing and concerns about political motivations.
12/10/2024 --timescall
The measure spreads out the establishment of the new district judgeships over about a decade to give three presidential administrations the chance to appoint the new judges.
12/03/2024 --fox5sandiego
Here are some of the many influential and noteworthy people who died in 2024.
12/02/2024 --forbes
Jan. 6 protesters and others Trump has suggested he might pardon have made public pleas to Trump in the wake of his victory Tuesday.
11/21/2024 --abcnews
Matt Gaetz has withdrawn, but will other Trump Cabinet nominees have trouble with confirmation?
11/20/2024 --startribune
Don’t murder the murders!
11/20/2024 --foxnews
How many? And how fast? That’s the question for the Senate in January as it will sprint to confirm as many of President-elect Donald Trump’s nominees as possible.
11/20/2024 --kron4
The battle over who will take the reins of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) has begun as the party points fingers and works to refocus after resounding losses on Election Day. Current DNC Chair Jaime Harrison is not expected to seek another term, opening up what could be a highly competitive contest for his leadership role. [...]
11/17/2024 --columbian
WASHINGTON — Portions of Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer’s artificial intelligence “road map” may survive into the new Congress, but legislation stemming from it will favor industry while downplaying civil rights, according to technology and data privacy experts.
 
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