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'50-50 risk': Columnist warns letting Trump fail could rush U.S. to 'point of no return'

While President Donald Trump's popularity is slipping in the polls, Financial Times columnist Edward Luce does not think it's time for Democrats to just sit back in watch him fail.

The reason for this, he writes, is that a flailing Trump could still work to assert total control of the American government.

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'I'm mad!' MAGA TV host melts down over 'frustrating' DOGE 'chain of command'

Pro-MAGA television host David Brody lashed out at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) over its muddled chain of command.

During a Tuesday morning broadcast on Real America's Voice, Brody pointed to Elon Musk's demand that federal employees provide an email with five reasons they should keep their jobs. Several agency heads responded by telling their employees to ignore the email.

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'Fast and furious': GOP lawmaker hits Musk for bigfooting 'good people' hired by Trump

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY) spoke of Elon Musk as a rogue actor when confronted by the confusing and contradictory emails sent to government employees telling them to justify their jobs or be fired.

CNN's John Berman hit the congresswoman with a timeline of the events of the past few days, that began on Saturday when Musk's team emailed two million federal employees asking them what they've done in the last week and claiming a non-answer qualified as a resignation.

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'Cuts for thee, not for me': GOP slammed for seeking DOGE exceptions for pals

As tech billionaire Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) task force takes a hacksaw to the federal workforce, firing tens of thousands of workers in possible violation of the law and canceling contracts and grants by decree, House and Senate Republicans have started a growing chorus in attempts to rein in the chaos a bit.

But in most cases, wrote Catherine Rampell in a scathing analysis for The Washington Post, they aren't doing this out of any good-governance principle, but to beg for favors for their friends and voters.

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'Jarring': Analyst claims voter rage is giving Republicans shocking reality check

Republican lawmakers are finding themselves at a disadvantage when they venture out of the right-wing media bubbles in which they and their hardcore supporters exist, according to a Washington Post columnist.

Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI) faced boos after returning to his ruby-red district as town hall attendees vented their rage over Donald Trump's first month in office, as did Rep. Richard McCormick (R-GA) and other GOP lawmakers who heard from angry constituents. Post columnist Philip Bump appeared on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" to explain the dynamic fueling those confrontations.

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Kremlin 'no comment' on report 95,000 Russian troops killed in Ukraine

The Kremlin declined to comment Tuesday after Russian independent news site Mediazona in collaboration with the BBC Russian Service published details of over 95,000 Russian soldiers killed fighting Ukraine, based on open-access data.

Mediazona published on Monday, the third anniversary of the offensive, an infographic with images and official reports of deaths of soldiers from various sources including social media, news reports and obituaries.

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'Went off the rails': Gov. tells how productive meeting fell apart when Trump walked in

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore appears to have dismissed any possibility of working with President Donald Trump after a meeting at the White House with the National Governors Association.

In a meeting with reporters Monday, Moore said an interaction between Trump and the roughly four dozen governors in attendance ended any thoughts he may have harbored about working with the president. The first-term Democrat said Maryland and other states must rise to the threat of massive layoffs and slash-and-burn federal budgeting coming from the administration.

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Medicaid not just for 'lazy welfare people': GOP lawmaker

House Republicans' plan to take an ax to Medicaid appears to be in real trouble as several Republicans from swing districts are voicing fear that it could harm their own constituents.

One such Republican is Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R-NJ), who made his case for not cutting Medicaid on the grounds that such cuts won't just hurt "lazy" people.

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'Flat out sucks at governing': James Carville has a strategy to force GOP to implode

Democrats don't have the direct power or votes to do a lot to stop President Donald Trump and the GOP-controlled Congress from enacting large parts of their agenda, as the nomination battles have shown — but they don't really need to block Trump to defeat him, veteran Democratic strategist James Carville argued in an op-ed for The New York Times.

There may well be cases in which Democrats will gain actual leverage in Congress, as other experts have noted — chiefly an upcoming shutdown fight in which the GOP is unlikely to have the votes to keep the government open on its own.

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'Never felt more betrayed': Red-state Army vet rages after Elon Musk fires him three times

Alaska-based Army veteran Mike Macans has found his life turned upside down in recent weeks thanks to the efforts of X owner Elon Musk.

In an interview with Alaska Public Radio, Macans said that he was shocked earlier this month when he received a message informing him that he was being fired from his job as a disaster recovery coordinator at the Small Business Administration.

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Supplement makers see chance to cash in as RFK Jr. takes charge

Last fall, before being named the senior U.S. health official, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said the Trump administration would liberate Americans from the FDA’s “aggressive suppression” of vitamins, dietary supplements, and other substances — ending the federal agency’s “war on public health,” as he put it.

In fact, the FDA can’t even require that supplements be effective before they are sold. When Congress, at the agency’s urging, last considered legislation to require makers of vitamins, herbal remedies, and other pills and potions to show proof of their safety and worth before marketing the products, it got more negative mail, phone calls, and telegrams than at any time since the Vietnam War, by some accounts. The backlash resulted in a 1994 law that enabled the dietary supplement industry to put its products on the market without testing and to tout unproven benefits, as long as the touting doesn’t include claims to treat or cure a disease. Annual industry revenues have grown from $4 billion to $70 billion since.

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'Surreal': Impeachment witness floats disturbing explanation for Trump selling out Ukraine

A key witness in Donald Trump's first impeachment saga suggested Tuesday that the U.S. president might have been compromised by Russia.

Alexander Vindman, the retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel who testified that Trump had pressured Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate Joe Biden's son, told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" that Trump had betrayed the war-torn nation to serve Vladimir Putin's interests.

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'Kind of a jerk': Three-time MAGA voter turns on Trump and Musk in CNN report

A Colorado man who voted for President Donald Trump in three different elections is not a fan of letting X owner Elon Musk unilaterally shut down entire government departments.

In an interview with CNN's John King, Trump supporter David Hayes explained why he didn't trust Musk to be an honest broker when it comes to rooting out wasteful government spending.

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