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'Some people become hostile': Trump throws Musk under bus in Oval Office tirade

During an Oval Office press availability with Germany’s newly installed chancellor, Friedrich Merz, Donald Trump frequently ignored his guest and spent a considerable amount of time lashing at at Elon Musk.

With Musk leaving his spot advising the president and almost immediately criticizing the budget bill that tailored to Trump's expectations, Trump in a rambling tirade littered with digressions and non-sequiturs, claimed he was "disappointed" with the billionaire.

He then noted that multiple advisers and aides who previously left his employ had also turned "hostile" once they departed.

"I'm very disappointed because Elon knew the inner workings of this bill better than almost anybody sitting here, better than you people," Trump told the assembled reporters. "He knew everything about it, he had no problem with it [and] all of a sudden he had a problem, and he only developed the problem when he found out that we're going to have to cut the EV mandate, because that's billions and billions of dollars, and it really is unfair."

After moving on to talking about cars, he turned back to Musk and complained, "He [Musk] became a little bit different and I can understand that. But he knew every aspect of this bill, he knew it better than almost anybody, and he never had a problem until right after he left. And if you saw the statements he made about me, which I'm sure you can get very easily, it's very fresh on tape, he said the most beautiful things about me, and he hasn't said bad about me personally, but I'm sure that will be next. But I'm very disappointed in Elon, I've helped Elon a lot."

"He's not the first; people leave my administration, and they love us. And then at some point, they miss it so badly," he later stated. "And some of them embrace it and some of them actually become hostile. I don't know what it is; it's sort of Trump Derangement Syndrome, I guess they call it."

"But we have it with others too," he claimed. "They leave and they wake up in the morning and the glamor is gone. The whole world is different and they become hostile."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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'Trump uses autopen': MSNBC breaks into Trump press conference for fact-check

President Donald Trump had a press conference on Thursday with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz where he went off on a tangent about the use of an autopen for a president to sign cards, letters and other documents.

Trump announced Wednesday that he would appoint a special counsel to investigate President Joe Biden's pardons and use of the autopen.

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Trump says it's 'interesting' Musk didn't use makeup to cover 'little black eye'

President Donald Trump was asked about tech billionaire Elon Musk, who has waged his own campaign against the 2026 budget legislation he calls the "big, beautiful bill."

According to Trump, the reason that Musk doesn't like the bill is that it cuts funding to electric vehicles, not, as Musk has said, because it adds to the deficit.

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GOP cringing at 'recipe for disaster' if forced to negotiate with Dems: reporter

According to longtime Beltway reporter David Drucker, failure is not an option for the Republican party as they attempt to create a budget bill that can make it to Donald Trump's desk.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," the Dispatch reporter said that MAGA voters would not be forgiving if the president's "big beautiful" as it is now written falters, forcing GOP lawmakers to start over.

Speaking with co-host Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, Drucker acknowledged that influential billionaire Elon Musk is demanding conservatives "kill the bill," but that Republicans may not have any choice to push it through.

Asked by host Scarborough if there are 4 or 5 GOP lawmakers "left in the the House that say no derail the bill," Drucker reported that would be tantamount to "saying no to President Donald Trump and their voters trust Trump more than they trust them."

"So as long as Trump wants this bill, this bill is likely to pass one way or the other," he continued. "Now, I've talked to Republican strategists about this, and this is the point I want to make: is that Republicans with their, you know, thin majorities in the House and Senate really aren't doing much else.

"Every ounce of energy they have, most of the legislation that they might pass is all rolled up into this reconciliation package," he elaborated. "That includes a lot of the tax cuts for middle and lower-class voters that the president campaigned on. It also includes a lot of the border security components that are broadly popular that he campaigned on, and so if this thing collapses, the entire Trump agenda collapses –– that which he can't do by executive order –– and the entire congressional Republican agenda collapses."

"They risk going to the voters empty-handed next year and that's a recipe for disaster," he pointed out.

"One other thing here, Republicans have told me that if they were to start from scratch and do this in a way that wasn't going to add to the debt, that would require actual normal legislating, and they'd have to negotiate with Democrats, at least in the Senate, where Democrats can filibuster," he predicted. "And the Republican base would look at that as a complete failure and be really, really upset that they weren't just plowing this stuff through."

"So there are a lot of political considerations that are, not surprisingly, are looming larger in the minds of these Republicans than the fiscal considerations, because no voter finally here, no voters are beating on their door complaining about the debt –– they're just not," he added.

You can watch below or at the link here.

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Chaos erupts in hearing after Dems move to subpoena Elon Musk over drug use

Chaos erupted at a House Oversight Committee hearing after Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-MA) called for former DOGE administrator Elon Musk to be subpoenaed over his alleged drug use.

"Four months ago, Democrats moved to subpoena Elon Musk to provide public testimony to this committee," Lynch said at the Thursday hearing on artificial intelligence. "From his erratic purge of the federal workforce to his exploitation of sensitive taxpayer data, to the cybersecurity nightmare he's created and the horrifying surveillance state we fear, Musk has built the American people into a position where they demand answers from Elon Musk."

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'Not the way': Trump's sons hammered for 'very confusing message' on new venture

A tech reporter flagged a "confusing" message sent out by president Donald Trump's sons about the family's involvement in a new cryptocurrency venture.

A new website drew attention this week with an announcement that the developers of the president's memecoin were working with a company called Magic Eden to set up a trading app to buy and sell digital currencies, but Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump both denied the family business had anything to do with the new project.

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'We've been watching this case': Supreme Court issues ruling in reverse bias row

The U.S. Supreme Court sided with a straight woman who filed a “reverse discrimination” lawsuit against her employer after her gay boss passed over her for a promotion that went to a gay colleague.

The unanimous decision issued Thursday would make it easier to file such challenges in some parts of the country, and CNN's Paula Reid explained the implications of the case as president Donald Trump has made it a priority to roll back diversity, equity and inclusion programs.

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Exasperated GOP senator complains we're in 'uncharted waters' with Trump policy

A visibly exasperated Sen. John Kennedy (R) was of two minds about the budget bill the GOP-controlled House has handed to the Senate to consider, agreeing with Elon Musk on its deficiencies then claiming it still needs to be passed.

Speaking with the co-hosts of MSNBC's "Morning Joe," the Louisiana Republican claimed Republicans may have no choice but to move forward with passing the bill because Donald Trump's tariff war has created economic instability.

According to Kennedy, "I've said and will continue to say because I believe it, that I'm for cutting spending, um, unproductive spending, until we run out of votes. But we can't do everything that everyone wants, and some people are just going to have to accept a ham and egg sandwich without the ham."

"We have some members of the Senate that will not get all the spending reductions they want," he added.

Addressing co-host Joe Scarborough, he continued, "Here's what's driving this, Joe, and this is ultimately why I think the bill will pass. We're in uncharted waters with the tariffs. I think the markets are telling us that we don't know what impact they're going to have on the economy, but if we don't extend those tax cuts, we're going into a recession and our economy is going to be on a journey to the center of the earth and, ultimately, I think that's why the bill will pass."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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'Not illegal': Fox News host busts Republican senator over his anti-Biden rant

Fox News host Bill Hemmer ended Sen. Chuck Grassley's (R-IA) rant against former President Joe Biden by pointing out that it was "not illegal" to sign documents with an autopen.

During an interview on Thursday, Hemmer noted that Democrats had called President Donald Trump's investigation into Biden's use of an autopen a distraction.

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'That's insane': Air traffic controller flags big problem that is not going away

An air traffic control supervisor credited for stopping two planes from colliding head-on near the troubled Newark airport told the co-hosts of MSNBC's "Morning Joe" that a lack of manpower is still making flying unsafe.

During his appearance on the MSNBC morning show, Jonathan Stewart explained that it is no longer uncommon that three air traffic controllers are being pressed into service doing a job that requires 14.

Under questioning, Stewart went into great detail about his job as a supervisor at Philadelphia Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON), and admitted that it is "insane" that the problems are increasing.

Admitting that he is in no way speaking for the FAA, he told the hosts, "I've said before, the way I tried to run my operation as an operational supervisor was I would do an hour on and an hour off, and that was based on the volume of traffic, the complexity, a lot of other things."

"You know: how tired is the controller, how far along in the shift is he? So on and so forth. But yes, your eyes start to get tired. I'm 45, not 25, so yeah, your eyes start to get tired, you start to truncate call signs and reverse call signs. For example, Delta is DAL, United is UAL, so that you start to look like a D, that D starts to look like a U. That's one of the signs that, you know, you're starting to get mental fatigue and that for me is a warning sign. I'm like, 'Okay, I need to get out of here, I need a break,' and that's going to be different every single time you plug in, depending on, you know, how tired I am, what I have going on at home –– like there's so many things involved in that."

"So it's important that the supervisor that's in charge, operational supervisor is cognizant of the ability and the mental acuity of the people that he's working with, right?" he elaborated. "So if I know that so-and-so is having a bad day, he's tired, I'm probably not going to put him in a busy position. The issue arises when you don't have anybody and now you have no choice, right? So you you want to do the right thing, but you can't because you have three people and you need 14. So, I mean, I don't even know what to say to that. That's just, that's insane."

He went on to note that the pandemic, which occurred during Donald Trump's first term, has been a major factor in the personnel shortage.

"It made it way worse because during the pandemic, we stopped training, people that were eligible to retire, just retired because what are you going to do, like sit around and, I don't know, make half a paycheck?" he recalled. "The same thing happened with the airlines too, to be fair. So you have a lack of experience on both sides of the microphone right now, which is a recipe for not good things –– let's leave it at that."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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'News to me': CNN host stunned by 'huge development' revealed about Trump agenda

CNN's Alayna Treene revealed a "huge development" in president Donald Trump's ongoing trade war against China.

The U.S. president will speak directly with Chinese president Xi Jinping about the escalating tariffs they're imposing on one another – and, in fact, they might already have spoken, the White House correspondent revealed Thursday morning in a live report.

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'The clouds could be purple!' CNN host mocks conservative with ludicrous example

CNN's Kate Bolduan mocked a conservative guest's suggestion that Joe Biden was not aware of the decisions he was making as president.

President Donald Trump ordered an investigation into the former president's use of "autopen" signatures, accusing his aides of using the automated procedure to cover his alleged cognitive decline and unlawfully assert executive power, and Republican strategist Brad Todd told "CNN News Central" there was some basis to his claims.

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'Game is over': MSNBC host warns 'reckless' Mike Johnson he is risking GOP seats

Donald Trump's "big beautiful" budget bill is still facing major headwinds with some Republican senators balking at the very real prospect that it will explode the national debt, and one MSNBC host stated they need to get their act together or face a wipe-out at the polls.

On Thursday morning, "Morning Joe" co-host Joe Scarborough went on an extended rant aimed primarily at House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) for being in denial about what he is asking his GOP colleagues in the Senate to go along with.

After sharing comments of Johnson stating he doesn't agree with billionaire Elon Musk's harsh criticism of the bill, former House member Scarborough bluntly stated, "I mean, let me just be really clear here: this bill would never pass when we served and we balanced the budget four years in a row and actually ran a budget surplus for two years."

"This is just pure, simple math," he insisted. "And it's as if these House Republicans, who claim to be conservative, it's as if these House Republicans, they see this, a house on fire, and they run to it, $37 trillion debt, and they run to it, and they throw trillions of gallons of gasoline on the fire to have it explode. Specifically $2.4 trillion worth of debt added on. No ideology, this is black and white."

"And by the way, this is something that Democrats, my Democratic friends and Republican friends need to understand: the game is over, the gig is up. You can't keep kicking the can down the road but that's exactly what this bill does. We can't afford it anymore," he claimed.

"I'm sorry, I don't know where Mike Johnson thinks his members are going to be running over the next two years, but they're going to be running in red state America where they're going to be a lot of people who are going to be hurt by this bill," he warned. "They can call it a big, beautiful bill all they want to, but the fact is this is a type of bill? No conservative would ever vote for it, ever. It's reckless, it's irresponsible, and it's a fiscal nightmare."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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