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Trump Nominee for Watchdog Role Is Out After Report of Racist Texts

October 21, 2025
in News
Trump Nominee for Watchdog Role Is Out After Report of Racist Texts
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The nomination of Paul Ingrassia, a far-right lawyer and firebrand podcaster who had been tapped by President Trump to lead the Office of Special Counsel, collapsed on Tuesday amid Republican opposition in the Senate, a day after Politico reported that he had sent a series of racist text messages.

Mr. Ingrassia said in a social media post late Tuesday that he would not appear at his nomination hearing set for later in the week. He cited senators who soured on his choice to run the independent corruption-fighting agency after the report of an apparent series of texts that, among other assertions, used a racist slur to describe holidays that honor Black Americans and declared that ethnically Chinese and Indian people could not be trusted.

“Unfortunately I do not have enough Republican votes at this time,” Mr. Ingrassia wrote in social media post Tuesday evening.

A White House official confirmed the withdrawal of the nomination late Tuesday. White House officials did not respond to other questions on Tuesday about Mr. Ingrassia’s nomination or whether he would remain in his current job as a White House liaison with the Department of Homeland Security.

In his post, Mr. Ingrassia said he would “continue to serve President Trump and this administration to Make America Great Again.”

The report of the messages added to a swirl of controversy around both Mr. Ingrassia, a self-described “constitutional law” expert, and Mr. Trump’s role in trying to bend the Office of Special Counsel to his will. It also came just days after a separate Politico report showed that young Republican officeholders and activists had routinely used racist and homophobic language and glibly invoked Hitler and the Holocaust in a Telegram chat.

At least four Republican senators, including the Senate majority leader, Senator John Thune of South Dakota, publicly signaled that they would have opposed his nomination to the office, which is a traditionally independent corruption-fighting agency that safeguards federal whistle-blowers and enforces some ethics laws.

Senator Rick Scott, Republican of Florida, told reporters on Monday evening that he had spoken with the administration about Mr. Ingrassia but did not share details. He told reporters, “I do not support him.”

Four Republicans opposing him would be enough to kill his nomination if all senators were present and the entire Democratic caucus voted against him.

The New York Times was unable to independently verify the text messages, which Politico said included telling a group of fellow Republicans that he had “a Nazi streak” and that the federal holiday honoring the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. should be “tossed into the seventh circle of hell.”

A lawyer for Mr. Ingrassia did not confirm the texts were authentic and said they might have been manipulated or were missing context, Politico said.

Mr. Ingrassia, 30, was set to testify on his nomination on Thursday before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, the Republican chairman of the panel, had indicated that he would address the questions around the nominee before the hearing, though Mr. Ingrassia’s nomination was withdrawn before any announcement was made by the committee.

During the 2024 Republican primary, Mr. Ingrassia pushed a fake theory that Nikki Haley was ineligible to run for president, which Mr. Trump then promoted on social media. In December 2020, as Mr. Trump was contesting his election loss to Joseph R. Biden Jr., Mr. Ingrassia’s podcast posted on Twitter, “Time for @realDonaldTrump to declare martial law and secure his re-election.”

Mr. Ingrassia, who graduated from Cornell Law School in 2022, according to his LinkedIn profile, also represented the “manosphere” influencer Andrew Tate, a self-described misogynist who is facing rape and human trafficking charges overseas.

Mr. Trump kicked off a legal battle early this year when he fired the previous head of the Office of Special Counsel, Hampton Dellinger, challenging a foundational precedent that said Congress can limit the president’s power to fire leaders of independent agencies.

A one-sentence email to Mr. Dellinger on Feb. 7 gave no reasons for terminating him, despite the statute’s language that the special counsel “may be removed by the president only for inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office.” But Mr. Dellinger gave up his legal fight in March after an appeals court ruled against him.

The turnover at the top of the office, which is responsible for investigating appeals from federal employees who believe they have been wrongly dismissed, came as it was scrutinizing mass firings of federal workers. Mr. Trump has since installed loyalists in an acting capacity to lead the office.

Katie Rogers is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President Trump.

The post Trump Nominee for Watchdog Role Is Out After Report of Racist Texts appeared first on New York Times.

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