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2026 Midterm Elections

Secret White House meetings are prepping insiders for 'very likely' Dem majority: report

Bracing for what appears to be an inevitable Democratic takeover of Congress after November's midterms, the Trump White House is already preparing for a barrage of investigations and hearings by holding secretive briefings with executive branch staff on how to handle aggressive congressional oversight.

According to reporting from The New Republic, attorneys at the White House Counsel's Office are conducting private briefings to ready staff for life under Democratic-led scrutiny. The Washington Post first reported on the strategy Monday.

The 30-minute briefings feature a PowerPoint presentation detailing how congressional oversight works and best practices for navigating it. The sessions also include guidance on how to respond to congressional inquiries in a timely manner.

"It's obvious to everyone that it's very likely," one official who attended the briefings told the Post. "It was a sober-eyed conversation."

A White House official sought to minimize the importance of the meetings, claiming they represent "nothing new" and that the counsel's office has provided oversight guidance to staffers since Trump returned to office.

However, multiple sources who spoke with the Post indicated that recent meetings with the counsel's office were acutely focused on the midterm elections and their anticipated fallout — suggesting the White House expects significant losses.

According to the The New Republic’s Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling, Trump's declining approval ratings are fueling expectations of a Democratic wave. Sixty-two percent of Americans disapprove of the president, according to an ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll published Friday — an increase of two percentage points since February.

Despite his waning influence, Trump has placed enormous pressure on his party to win, acutely aware of the consequences he would face if Democrats gain control of Congress, the report notes before adding, Democratic-led committees would have subpoena power to investigate his administration's actions on multiple fronts.


Top Ken Paxton donors are sitting out as he 'struggles' to finance his  campaign: report

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's attempt to unseat Republican Sen. John Cornyn is sputtering financially, with major donors who previously bankrolled his campaigns now sitting on the sidelines — a striking display of the deep fracture within the Republican Party between its business-oriented establishment and its hard-right MAGA base, writes the New York Times' Lauren McGaughy.

According to her analysis, Paxton has fallen dramatically short of his fundraising goals. He claimed last year he would need about $20 million to mount a credible challenge to Cornyn, but he's raising far less than anticipated as he "struggles" to rake in donations.

Many of the wealthy donors who built Paxton's political career in Texas have decided to watch from the sidelines. Several businessmen who spent millions supporting his state attorney general campaigns have not contributed to either his Senate campaign or the political action committee backing his run.

Most strikingly, the Times is reporting, the billionaire West Texas oilmen and far-right kingmakers who have long backed Paxton have spent little on his Senate run. Over the last five years, Tim Dunn and brothers Farris and Dan Wilks gave Paxton more than $1 million directly or through their political action committees. But only Dan Wilks has contributed to the Senate campaign, throwing the candidate just $7,000. Dunn has spent millions in other federal races instead.

One prominent Texas donor, Alex Fairly, explained the calculus bluntly to McGaughy, stating, "It's more a matter of saving my bullets for the general," the Amarillo businessman said. "Winning in November is more important."

Fairly gave only $7,000 to Paxton's Senate campaign — far less than the $300,000 he has contributed to Paxton's state campaigns since 2021.

The fundraising disparity is stark as Cornyn has significantly outspent Paxton and still had $11 million in his campaign and committee accounts as of the latest filing — three times as much as Paxton had on hand. In total, Paxton has raised only around $13.5 million between his campaign and supporting committee.

The money gap reflects a fundamental split in the Republican Party. Business-oriented conservatives prefer the establishment-aligned Cornyn, while Paxton represents the pugnacious politics of the MAGA movement — a divide that's playing out in real time through donor behavior.

Republicans warned about 'powerful alarm bell' going off as Trump drags them down

According to a long-time Republican pollster, Republicans have a voter problem that is far and above worse than reeling back MAGA voters as Donald Trump’s influence wanes.

In an opinion piece for the New York Times, conservative Kristen Soltis Anderson warned the GOP leadership that, what she has dubbed “normie” Republicans, are fed up with where the party has gone under Trump and that “ought to be a powerful alarm bell for Republican candidates looking to win the 2026 elections.”

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Judge refuses to rule out using 'staggering loophole' to nullify her own election

Democrats are hoping to unseat a pair of Georgia Supreme Court justices this month, in what would be the first time in more than 100 years that a sitting state justice has lost election — but according to Bolts Magazine, a ruling from the court itself created a massive flaw in the system that potentially lets the justices cancel their own election after losing, and one of them is not responding to questions about whether they will take advantage of it.

"Two liberal lawyers, former Democratic state Senator Jen Jordan and personal injury attorney Miracle Rankin, are seeking to oust Justices Sarah Warren and Charlie Bethel, respectively, and all but Warren agreed to interviews with Bolts," said the report. "The elections are officially nonpartisan, but the challengers are running with Democratic Party backing, while Governor Brian Kemp and other Republicans have rallied around the incumbents."

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Conservative paper runs ex-FBI agent's scathing rebuke of John Cornyn as he backs Dem

Former Dallas Field Office FBI Special Agent Matthew DeSarno endorsed Democratic state Rep. James Talarico for Senate in Texas in an op-ed for the conservative-leaning Dallas Morning News published on Monday, during which he also took swipes at MAGA Attorney General Ken Paxton and Republican incumbent Sen. John Cornyn.

Cornyn is currently in a fight for his political life as he navigates a fiery primary runoff with Paxton, who has gained a commanding lead in polls, as President Donald Trump, who has worked with both of them, chooses not to get involved. Meanwhile, Talarico, a Presbyterian seminarian and former teacher, has managed to build a passionate following and a competitive position in the most recent polls, hoping to break a three-decade losing streak for the Democratic Party in Texas.

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'Wasting time': GOP insiders sound alarm on Trump's focus

Some Republicans fear President Donald Trump is "wasting time" touting his signature policy bill from last year, Politico reported on Monday — and they want him to course correct as his polls appear to have the whole party headed for a wipeout.

This comes as Trump tries again to sell his "Big Beautiful Bill" that cut taxes while eliminating over $1 trillion from Medicaid and food assistance over the next decade; a sell that becomes harder as voters are naturally less inclined to trust him.

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Married GOP rep's alleged inappropriate letter to young staffer exposed in new report

New details have emerged about the sexual misconduct probe into Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-NC) — including what sources told Axios was an inappropriate letter he sent to a subordinate.

The 65-year-old married lawmaker, who has faced a number of other controversies, including a bizarre incident in which he banned protesters from McDonald's franchise locations he owns, has already been reported to have been romantically involved with his former deputy chief of staff.

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'Frustrated' Fox News voter panel blames Trump for 'very, very, very high' prices

A panel of voters on Fox News suggested that Republican control of government and President Donald Trump were to blame for "very, very, very high" prices.

During a Fox News segment on Monday, host Harris Faulkner asked the voter panel how they would approach the midterm elections. One independent said that she was frustrated and might not vote at all.

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'Grouchy' Trump's latest attack on top Democrat sparks outrage: 'He knows he's cooked'

President Donald Trump's latest "grouchy" attack on a top Democrat sparked outrage on social media on Sunday.

Trump posted on Truth Social that House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries needs to be "impeached" over his criticisms of the Supreme Court, comparing it to the phone call that Trump had with Ukrainian officials in 2019 that got Trump impeached. Trump described Jeffries as "Low IQ," an attack he's used on other Democrats like Reps. Ilhan Omar and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

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Trump boils over in demand to impeach 'Low IQ' Dem: 'They'll be doing this to me!'

President Donald Trump called on Republicans to impeach House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) on Sunday after Jeffries criticized the Supreme Court.

Trump's comments followed a statement Jeffries released last week in which he described the Supreme Court as "illegitimate" after its decision in Louisiana v. Callais. The case struck down Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which prohibits racial gerrymandering. Experts have warned that the decision could disenfranchise millions of voters across the nation.

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MAGA Louisiana Gov. just sent a chilling message with 'corrupt' order: expert

Louisiana's MAGA Gov. Jeff Landry, a close ally of President Donald Trump's, just sent a chilling message with his latest "corrupt" order, according to one expert.

Marc Elias, a voting rights attorney, discussed Landry's recent State of Emergency declaration, signed last week, on a new episode of "Democracy Watch" with progressive YouTuber Brian Tyler Cohen on Sunday. Landry's order canceled the upcoming congressional election in his state as Louisiana lawmakers work to pass a new election map. The order followed the Supreme Court's decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which found that states can politically gerrymander their maps, even if it effectively creates a racial gerrymander that was once prohibited under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.

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Midterms could create a 'dangerous and volatile situation' if GOP suffers big loss: expert

A political expert warned on Sunday that the U.S. could face a "dangerous and volatile situation" if the GOP suffers massive losses in the upcoming midterm election, as some have predicted.

Republicans are limping into the midterms, led by a president with a 37% overall approval rating, one of the lowest for an incumbent in recent elections. Meanwhile, Democrats have won a slew of races, ranging from state elected offices to special congressional races, which has given the party a lot of confidence heading into November.

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Trump aides admit GOP will be crushed in midterms: 'We're already cooked'

Several White House aides have admitted they expect to be crushed in November's midterm elections, a report revealed on Saturday.

"The vibe right now is we know we are already cooked in the midterms," a senior official told MS NOW, requesting not to be named.

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