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Defense companies not ‘exiting’ market at such a fast rate

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One key driver of the Trump administration’s overhaul of the Federal Acquisition Regulations is to make it easier for companies to do business with the government. One primary, long-held belief among federal contracting experts: Companies routinely leave the industrial base, specifically the Defense Department market, because of the burdensome regulations required to do business with agencies.

While most would agree reducing these barriers is a good thing, new information shows the defense industrial base (DIB) is healthy. Competition remains strong and companies are in fact not “exiting” the market, but shifting their approaches to ensure success.

“A comprehensive survey of 45,000 ‘exited’ firms found that the reported decline is significantly overstated because many of these firms were still pursuing work with DoD or working solely as a subcontractor,” according to a new report released today by researchers at the Greg and Camille Baroni Center for Government Contracting in the Costello College of Business at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va. “Despite the popular narrative that industry consolidation has reduced competition in the government contracting industrial base, separate Baroni analysis demonstrates that there are meaningful levels of competition in both DoD and Other Federal markets that have been very stable over time.”

In its inaugural Government Contracting Trends and Performance Index, Baroni Center researchers found not only is the DIB healthy and competition strong, the percentage of new entrants in both DoD and other federal industrial bases has remains relatively stable over the past decade.

Source: Government Contracting Trends and Performance Index, July 2025.

To be clear, the researchers aren’t saying there hasn’t been consolidation or a significant decrease in the DIB over the last decade-plus, but the so-called mass exodus of contractors needs more context.

For example, researchers say the most frequent reason given by compa­nies for exiting was an unfavorable working condition with DoD. But the second and third most frequent reasons were the companies hadn’t won any contracts recently or were performing work as a subcontractor, and therefore only appeared to have exited.

At the same time, the push for new entrants ticked up again between 2022 and 2023, but newcomer stats are still down from previous years. Center researchers say the average number of new entrants into both the DoD and civilian market places ranged from 11% to 12% per year.

Source: Government Contracting Trends and Performance Index, July 2025.

Concerns over the health of the industrial base and trying to attract new entrants has been a particular focus for DoD leaders for some time. In October, for example, the Pentagon detailed how it plans to spend tens of billions of dollars each year to shore up its industrial base over the near and long terms.

Earlier in 2024, DoD awarded a defense industrial base consortium agreement that will let industry partners, including small businesses and non-traditional contractors, work with them on defense supply chain technologies projects and potential research through prototype development initiatives.

Beyond new initiatives to attract new companies or keep current vendors engaged, the Trump administration is leading an overhaul of the Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR) to further reduce regulatory burdens.

FAR Overhaul deadline approaching

Larry Allen, the associate administrator in the Office of Governmentwide Policy at the General Services Administration, said this first revamp of the FAR in nearly 40 years is long overdue. He said it’s more than just stripping down the regulations — it’s about culture change.

“Even if we rewrite the rules, we’re not going to be ultimately successful unless we reform the culture. The culture, not just of the acquisition workforce, although that’s important, but also the industry culture as well,” Allen said during a Wednesday webinar sponsored by the Baroni Center. “One of the major focus areas of the FAR overhaul is to look at how we change that structure. How do we change the zeitgeist of the acquisition community, if you will? And I’m very happy to say that we’re already doing that and integrating these changes into the Federal Acquisition Institute. I know that our colleagues in the Department of Defense are doing the same thing with the Defense Acquisition University, and that’s really going to be something that pays dividends down the road.”

So far, the Office of Federal Procurement Policy and the FAR Council, which includes GSA, DoD and NASA, have revised nine sections of the regulations and are actively accepting comments on the changes.

Most recently, the council updated FAR Part 6 on competition requirements. Among the changes are simplifying the language in the section, specifically around small business and set-aside requirements, and streamlining competition requirements. The council is accepting comments on changes to Part 6 through Aug. 11.

Allen said some of the more prominent FAR sections are on tap for revision later this summer and into the fall.

“We’ve come out with a number of deviations to existing rules, and the idea there is to have an immediate, upfront impact on the way the government buys things. You’re going to see deviations continue to roll out through the summer and into the fall, as we get into bigger areas like commercial item acquisition, small business and services contracting,” he said. “These are the things we’re working on right now, and you’ll see the results of that in just a month or so, starting to roll out. The idea is to have an immediate impact and then go through the formal rule-making process to make these changes permanent.”

Allen said OFPP’s goal is to complete the first draft, as it were, of the FAR overhaul by Sept. 30. At the same time, however, Allen said if the timeline slips a bit to make sure they get it right, that’s acceptable.

“One of the things that’s impressed me coming in here is to see just how quickly we are making the changes that we’re making. That’s no easy task, and it is also reflective of the dedication of some really smart people in and out of government that are working on this project and the results that we’re already seeing,” he said. “We’ve got a team of seven or eight people here at GSA that are working on this more or less full time, and that’s all just one part of it. There’s teams at DoD, teams at NASA, and a couple of people at OFPP that are overseeing all of this work. It’s very coordinated. When you get in those weekly meetings that we have, there are key focus areas, there are key discussions, and sometimes they do get very tactical with the practitioners. But we also want to keep in mind where we want to be at the end of this process.”

Better definition of non-traditional needed

One thing the Baroni Center researchers say is needed, whether in the FAR or through legislation, is a better definition of non-traditional vendors.

The report found the legal definition for non-traditional firms excludes only 7.5% of companies in the DoD market. “If non-traditional contractors are expected or desired to be instrumental in increasing innovation in government, these firms must be both better defined and tracked over time,” the report stated.

Jerry McGinn, the outgoing executive director of the center, said if the legal definition of non-traditional covers 92.5% of all companies, then the definition is meaningless.

“If you want really to measure non-traditionals [in the market], you have to define it better. And that’s between Congress and the administration to figure out how they want to define, if they want to,” said McGinn, who announced today he will be leaving the center and moving on to become an adjunct professor at GMU beginning in January 2026.

The report said Congress has that opportunity as the House and Senate work on two major acquisition reform bills, the Forged Act in the Senate and the Speed Act in the House.

“This [definition] significantly undermines the value of the term ‘non-traditional’ as a proxy for identifying technology firms bringing innovation to the government. If non-traditional contractors are the focus for increasing innovation in government contracting, these firms must be both better defined and assessed,” the report stated. “Along the lines proposed in S. 5618 FORGED Act intro­duced in December 2024, Congress redefines ‘non-traditional defense contractor’ in legislation updating and clarifying 10 U.S.C. §3014 so that the term and corresponding applications are directly useful in identifying, incentivizing and measuring the performance of corporations developing and delivering new tech­nological capabilities to DoD. For example, the definition can be made to identify corporations whose characteristics match those commonly associated with substantive technological innovation, such as investing meaningfully in non-reimbursable research and development, venture capital or private equity sponsorship, and high rates of annual revenue growth from commercial technology sales.”

The definition of non-traditional companies becomes even more important as DoD and other agencies use more other transaction agreements (OTAs).

The Baroni Center found OTA use in the DoD increased more than 220%, to $16 billion, from 2018 to 2023, growing to 10% of research, development, test and evaluation (RDT&E) spending.

Source: Government Contracting Trends and Performance Index, July 2025.

McGinn said between OTAs and the increased use of small business innovation research and small business technology transfer (SBIR/STTR) programs, DoD and civilian agencies need to improve how they measure innovation.

“There’s been a big focus for the past decade on innovation, whether it’s other transactions authorities, commercial solutions openings or Small Business Innovation Research. But the fact that matter is those efforts are having a big impact. SBIR has almost tripled in the past 10 years. OTA use more than doubled in the past five years. However, they’re still a small percent overall of spend. The most important thing is, we have no way to really track what happens with these investments,” McGinn said. “We can track who starts the prototyping efforts in OTAs and who does the phase one or phase two innovation grant, but what happens next? What transitions to production? What transitions to a program of record? It has to be done individually. So if we want to measure those results, we have to figure out better ways to do that.”

McGinn added agencies have to offer the right incentives to drive more innovation. The survey found the government can encourage industry by identifying profit, ease of doing business and having a steady partnership.

The post Defense companies not ‘exiting’ market at such a fast rate first appeared on Federal News Network.

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Black Lives Matter Activist in Boston Pleads Guilty to Federal Fraud Charges – Scammed Donors to Fund Her Lifestyle

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Screencap of YouTube video.

A Black Lives Matter activist in Boston named Monica Cannon-Grant pleaded guilty to federal charges this week, admitting that she scammed donors and used their money to fund her own lavish lifestyle.

Cannon-Grant was previously held up as an admired figure. The city of Boston named her the Bostonian of the year at one point for her ‘social justice activism’ and she was even recognized by the Boston Celtics basketball team for her efforts.

She is now facing a minimum of two years in prison.

The New York Post reports:

BLM-linked activist admits conning donors to fund her lavish lifestyle

A once-celebrated Boston social activist has pleaded guilty to defrauding donors — including Black Lives Matter — out of thousands of dollars that she used as a personal piggy bank.

Monica Cannon-Grant, 44, pleaded guilty Monday to 18 counts of fraud-related crimes that she committed with her late husband while operating their Violence in Boston (VIB) activists group, according to the US Attorney’s Office in Massachusetts.

The activist scammed money — including $3,000 from a BLM group — while claiming it was to help feed children and run protests like one in 2020 over the murder of George Floyd and police violence.

Cannon-Grant also conned her way into getting $100,000 in federal pandemic-related unemployment benefits — which she used to pay off her personal auto loan and car insurance policy.

But she has now confessed to transferring funds to personal bank accounts to pay for rent, shopping sprees, delivery meals, visits to a nail salon — and even a summer vacation to Maryland.

Just amazing.

Here’s a local video report:

She should pay back every penny.

The post Black Lives Matter Activist in Boston Pleads Guilty to Federal Fraud Charges – Scammed Donors to Fund Her Lifestyle appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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Keith Olbermann Backpedals Furiously With Apology for Threatening CNN’s Scott Jennings – Jennings Responds (VIDEO)

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As the Gateway Pundit reported yesterday, former MSNBC host and generally unhinged leftist Keith Olbermann, appeared to threaten CNN’s conservative pundit Scott Jennings on Twitter saying, ‘You’re next motherf**ker.’

Well, Olbermann may have gotten a phone call or a visit from the FBI because today he walked back those comments with a full-throated apology.

RedState has an update:

To quickly recap, Scott Jennings, a Salem Media Network radio host and conservative CNN political commentator, reacted to breaking news on Monday that Kimmel had been reinstated by tweeting, “So basically his employer suspended him for being an insensitive pr**k, and we don’t live in an authoritarian regime? Got it.”

This enraged Olbermann, who proceeded to tweet what many, including Jennings, perceived to be a threat. “You’re next, motherf**ker. But keep mugging to the camera.” Jennings tagged Patel and included a screengrab of the tweets in response.

Though the FBI hasn’t commented as to whether an investigation was launched, Olbermann ostensibly appears to have thought twice about what he tweeted and deleted, apologizing profusely in tweets posted on Tuesday and claiming what he wrote was “misinterpreted”:

See Olbermann’s tweet below:

Scott Jennings, always a class act, offered this hilarious response:

Keith Olbermann really needs help. The guy is just so out of control.

The post Keith Olbermann Backpedals Furiously With Apology for Threatening CNN’s Scott Jennings – Jennings Responds (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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Where is Lance Twiggs? Kirk Assassin’s Transgender Lover Has Vanished

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Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson and roommate Lance Twiggs

Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson lived with his transgender partner – a male-to-female trans named Lance “Luna” Twiggs.

The FBI used Robinson’s texts with his transgender partner to solidify that Robinson was the assassin. Lance Twiggs has not been charged with any crime; however, federal authorities are still investigating.

Last week, Utah authorities released the text exchange between Tyler Robinson and his transgender lover, Lance Twiggs, sent shortly after Kirk’s assassination.

Utah County District Attorney Jeff Gray announced seven charges against Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson. They will also be seeking the death penalty.

Robinson was charged with:

– Count 1: Aggravated murder (capital offense)
– Count 2: Felony reckless discharge of a firearm causing bodily injury
– Count 3: Felony obstruction of justice for hiding the firearm
– Count 4: Felony obstruction of justice for discarding the clothing he wore during the shooting
– Count 5: Witness tampering for asking roommate to delete incriminating messages
– Count 6: Witness temperating for demanding trans roommate stay silent, and not speak to police
– Count 7: Commission of a violent offense in the presence of a child

Jeff Gray released the chilling texts between Tyler Robinson and his “love” Lance Twiggs.

Read the text exchange here:

Tyler Robinson texts with transgender lover Lance Twiggs / 1
Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson texts with transgender lover Lance Twiggs / 2

Lance Twiggs was reportedly cooperating with the FBI, however, according to the Daily Mail he has seemingly vanished.

“If [Lance Twiggs] ever comes back, it will be in a body bag,” a neighbor said to the Daily Mail. “That’s not a threat – I’m just saying that there are so many people who want a piece of him he’d be mad to show his face in public again. This was a generational event.”

The Daily Mail reported:

The Trans boyfriend of Charlie Kirk’s alleged assassin has fled their former lovenest – and locals tell the Daily Mail they never want to see him again.

Lance Twiggs, 22, was led away for questioning when police swooped on the smart three-bed condo he shared with accused gunman Tyler Robinson, 22.

Shaken neighbors say the part time plumber has not been back to the $320,000 property in St. George, Utah – one declaring: ‘Good riddance. I never want to see either of them again.’

His beaten-up Infinity compact is still parked in his space with his work gear tossed across the back seat and a sandwich wrapper and a drink on the front passenger seat.

Upstairs lights have been left on for more than a week and notes and Amazon packages are piling up outside the home owned by Twiggs’s devout Mormon family.

The post Where is Lance Twiggs? Kirk Assassin’s Transgender Lover Has Vanished appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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