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'Only the movers and shakers matter': Historians slam Trump over hero-worship plan

By Jennifer Tucker, Wesleyan University and Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University

Donald Trump first came up with his plan for a “ National Garden of American Heroes” at the end of his first term, before President Joe Biden quietly tabled it upon replacing Trump in the White House.

Now, with Trump back in the Oval Office – and with the country’s 250th anniversary fast approaching – the project is back. The National Endowment for the Humanities is seeking to commission 250 statues of famous Americans from a predetermined list, to be displayed at a location yet to be determined.

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'Hard time believing' that: CNN host dubious of 'noteworthy' Trump claim in new interview

President Donald Trump sat down for a lengthy interview with Time Magazine on the occasion of his 100th day in office, and the reporter who spoke with him revealed what he believes was one the most "noteworthy" comments.

The magazine's Eric Cortellessa asked the president whether he had asked El Salvador president Nayib Bukele to return Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a legal U.S. resident mistakenly deported out of the country, and Trump said no one had asked him to request that – although the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled unanimously that the administration should facilitate his return.

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'His nose is lengthening by the day': Congressman says Trump is lying in his new interview

In an interview with Time magazine, President Trump alleged, he’s made 200 deals on tariffs. CNN anchor John Berman noted, zero deals have been announced.

“I want to read you the exchange between Time magazine national political reporter Eric Cortellessa and the president,” Berman said.

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'He has no idea what he doesn't know': Trump's envoy undercut for 'dropping the ball'

A former State Department official had little good to say about Donald Trump's chief envoy to the world's hot spots and ripped into him on MSNBC for "dropping the ball" multiple times.

Appearing on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," Matthew Miller, who served as the spokesperson for the State Department after heading the Office of Public Affairs at the DOJ, was asked about Steve Witkoff's performance with MSNBC regular Mike Barnicle pointedly noting the Trump appointee is a real estate lawyer with no international negotiation experience to speak of.

Barnicle pointed out, "He [Witkoff] gets very high marks here in New York City from people who know him in the real estate business but this isn't the real estate business," and then asked, "Have you ever heard of a single presidential envoy being involved in so many hotspots around the world, and so many flashpoints around the world?"

ALSO READ: 'Promoted our tormenter': MAGA fans vent disgust at Trump official's latest move

"Steve Witkoff does seem like a very capable individual to me, a very smart individual," Miller responded. "The problem, I think, is that he has no idea what he doesn't know. He doesn't have the experience in these fields, he doesn't have the background, he doesn't have the diplomatic knowledge and, from all reports, he doesn't have anyone around him who can tell him what he doesn't know."

"And so you see him go to Russia and meet with Vladimir Putin and then come back and do an interview where he says, 'So the five regions that Russia is either wholly or partially occupying. I can't remember the names of all five of them. Nevertheless, I know that the people there want to be part of Russia," he recalled with a smirk before exclaiming, "No they don't! There's no evidence that they do."

"But he's heard that from Putin, and he doesn't know enough about the backstory, he doesn't know enough about the history, he doesn't know enough to push back on that when he hears it from Putin," he explained. "And the problem with him being stretched so thin as, as you note, is, you can't do all of those things."

"You can't negotiate peace in Ukraine and Iran deal and into the war in Gaza which you might recall was his initial portfolio, the thing that he was initially designed to do," he added. "And he has completely dropped the ball on –– you look at just what's happened in Gaza. This administration was handed a cease fire that we spent a lot of effort trying to get over the finish line, and we got over the finish line in the last days of the [Biden] administration, the entire conceit of that cease-fire, the way it was designed, was that the incoming administration would spend the six weeks of phase one to try to get it to phase two, and they have completely dropped the ball, haven't spent any diplomatic time, haven't spent any, spent any diplomatic muscle trying to get that to an end, get that to an end to the war."

"It's a complete catastrophe and they have completely lost focus on it, I suspect, because Witkoff is busy working on other matters," he suggested.

You can watch below or at the link.

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Trump hung up on 'unsurprising fact' complicating Ukraine-Russia negotiations: report

President Donald Trump has been venting to advisers that resolving the Ukraine-Russia war has been more difficult than he expected, after passing 93 days past his own deadline for ending the conflict on his first day in office.

The president's agitation boiled over Thursday after Russia launched its deadliest attack on Kyiv since last summer, killing at least 12 people, and he's been telling aides he wants a deal in place by his 100th day in office comes next week, reported CNN.

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Trump 'did not expect this reaction' during tariff negotiations: MSNBC financial analyst

Donald Trump misplayed what he thought was a winning hand when he decided to start a trade war with China .

That is the opinion of MSNBC contributor and financial analyst Steve Rattner who appeared on "Morning Joe" on Friday to deliver bad news to American consumers.

Speaking with co-host Willie Geist, Rattner suggested that the president met his match when speaking with President Xi Jinping of China who set the president straight.

ALSO READ: 'We’ve made a mistake': Trump’s trade war sends GOP into frenzy

"I think they're desperately trying to show some kind of progress," he said of the Trump administration. "They talk about India and this and that; I think China is the really tough nut, we have these huge, huge reciprocal tariffs on on both sides."

"Now I think my personal view, which based on I'm not obviously in the White House, is that I think Trump did not expect this kind of reaction from China when he put them on," he elaborated. "I think he thought they would quickly come to the table because we buy so much stuff from them. But, instead, Xi basically said, 'I'm a real country, my economy is essentially as big as yours, a lot more people. I make all kinds of stuff that you need, and I'm not going to be pushed around by you.'"

"And so Xi put on his tariffs. Trump put on more tariffs and here we sit 154% tariffs on imports from them which basically means no imports," he concluded. "So the answer is look, at some point I think there will be conversations with China. I just don't believe at this point we're really making any progress."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Check on him?' Conservative 'luminary' judge accused of going 'rogue' after Trump ruling

“Can someone check in on Judge Wilkinson? Because the conservative legal movement luminary appears to be having a moment,” wrote Joe Patrice in his latest piece for Above the Law

J. Harvie Wilkinson III is a Reagan-appointed Judge on the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. The 80-year-old has sat on the court since 1984.

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'Embarrassing': Elon Musk said to have 'little to show' for his time as 'first buddy'

Elon Musk will be leaving Washington with little to show for his controversial time in government, according to a new analysis.

The tech billionaire spent more than $288 million of his own money to get Donald Trump re-elected and was rewarded with a perch overseeing the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, but Axios reported that the most powerful political outsider ever is walking away with "a legacy of self-destruction."

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Judge blocked 'off-the-rails' Trump with order that won't be easy to reverse: legal expert

A judge threw up a serious hurdle to president Donald Trump's executive order that would substantially roll back voting rights.

U.S. District judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly paused the president's March 25 executive order, titled "Preserving and Protecting the Integrity of American Elections," instructing the independent Election Assistance Commission to change the national mail voter registration form to require applicants to prove their U.S. citizenship, and former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance wrote on her Substack page that the ruling would be difficult to overturn.

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Mike Lindell lawyers threatened by judge over briefs loaded with AI-generated fake cases

A federal judge put My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell's lawyers "on notice" this week over nearly 30 citations in a legal brief submitted in a defamation lawsuit involving Eric Coomer, the former director of product security and strategy for voting technology supplier Dominion.

According to a report from KUSA's Kyle Clark, U.S. District Judge Nina Wang accused the attorneys for Lindell, who maintains the 2020 presidential election was stolen from Donald Trump, of using generative AI to supplement the brief.

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'Not a good thing': GOP lawmaker breaks with Trump when pressed on CNN

A House Republican broke with President Donald Trump late Thursday on CNN when pressed about his thoughts on efforts to end the war in Ukraine.

Rep. Rich McCormick (R-GA) joined "The Source" with anchor Kaitlan Collins. The congressman, who previously served in the Marine Corps and now sits on the House Armed Services and Foreign Affairs Committee, was brought on to give his thoughts on Trump possibly "rushing into making an agreement" between Russia and Ukraine that could "hurt his legacy."

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'Thin ice': How Trump's new pro-natalist stance threatens reproductive care

As the Trump administration considers ways to encourage Americans to have more children — from a $5,000 “baby bonus” to a “National Medal of Motherhood” — both anti-abortion and abortion-rights clinics face uncertainty about how such policies might affect their federal funding.

For groups like Planned Parenthood, which provide abortions, contraceptives, sexually transmitted infection testing and other health services, the outlook appears bleak. Clinics have started shuttering following a freeze of tens of millions of dollars in federal funds.

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Trump schooled by GOP senator on 'America First' policy that 'moved Depression worldwide'

Although Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) endorsed now-President Donald Trump in the 2024 election, it was a lukewarm endorsement.

The bad blood between Trump and McConnell remained, and MAGA Republicans were not happy when McConnell voted against confirming Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

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