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'It's costing the President': GOP pollster puts Trump on notice over major drop in support

Donald Trump is bleeding support among independents and swing voters, and one Republican pollster says he is concerned.

GOP pollster and communications strategist Frank Luntz appeared on CNN on Sunday, where he was asked about the outlet's polling showing Trump's falling numbers.

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'I did the right thing': How one judge is fighting back in support of arrested colleague

Sawyer County, WI Judge Monica Isham on Saturday announced she’ll “refuse to hold court” following the arrest of Milwaukee County Judge Hannah Dugan “if there is no guidance for … and no support for” judges in the state.

Isham sent the letter Saturday to her fellow Wisconsin judges, insisting she has “no intention of allowing anyone be taken out of [her] courtroom by [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] and sent to a concentration camp, especially without due process.”

The judge’s announcement comes after Dugan, first elected to the Milwaukee County Circuit Court in 2016, was arrested on Friday by the FBI for “allegedly obstructing federal authorities who were seeking to detain an undocumented immigrant,” NBC News reports.

READ MORE: Here’s the real reason behind Trump’s 'startlingly fast turnaround' on his trip to Rome


Dugan was described by NBC News as “a longtime social justice advocate before she took the bench.”

Isham, in her letter to fellow judges, argued Dugan “stood on her Oath” and “was arrested and charged with felonies for it.”

“I no longer feel protected or respected as a Judge in this administration,” Isham wrote.

Isham also described multiple instances of “racial attacks in [her] court” since President Donald Trump’s inauguration on January 20, writing she’s been “called an ‘immigrant,’” was told she has “no jurisdiction over while people in [her] county” and “had a juror loudly proclaim” they would not follow orders “from a brown or black person.”

READ MORE: 'Real War on Christmas': Trump threatens toy industry ahead of holiday shopping season

As Isham noted, she was “elected as the first woman, first Native American, first minority all together to serve as circuit court judge” in her county.

"If this costs me my job or gets me arrested then at least I know I did the right thing," Isham wrote.

Isham’s colleague “Dugan was arrested and charged with obstruction of an official proceeding on Friday after evidence came to light that she had shielded the migrant from ICE agents, according to a criminal complaint,” Fox News reports. “She was also charged with concealing an individual to prevent discovery and arrest.”

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'Was it?' GOP insider Scott Jennings rendered speechless when challenged on Trump spending

Former George W. Bush special assistant Scott Jennings was rendered uncharacteristically speechless Sunday on CNN.

Jennings, a frequent contributor to CNN's TV lineup, appeared on the network over the weekend to talk about the Republicans' upcoming budget fights. He specifically highlighted the tax and spending debate as one area in which the GOP could gain some ground in voter approval.

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'They are disruptors': Trump tells GOP allies not to treat town hall protestors 'nicely'

Donald Trump on Sunday encouraged GOP lawmakers to not "treat troublemakers nicely" at town hall events.

Trump over the weekend took to Truth Social to complain about the widely reported protests at GOP discussions.

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Here's the real reason for Trump's 'startlingly fast turnaround' on trip to Rome: report

President Donald Trump spent a mere “14 hours in Rome,” as his “whirlwind trip to Italy” came against the backdrop of “global discord,” the New York Times reports.

The reason for his quick turnaround?

“He wanted to make it back to his golf resort in New Jersey before the end of the day,” Trump told aides, according to the Times.

READ MORE: 'Drowning in hubris': How a conservative legal doctrine — and his own 'stupidity' — could topple Trump

As reporters David Sanger and Motoko Rich report, Trump “flew briefly this weekend into a European continent he has thrown into chaos in recent months, paying respects to Pope Francis at his funeral, but also meeting with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine at a critical moment that may decide both the country’s boundaries and its fate.”

“Trump was on the ground in Rome for about 14 hours, and left immediately after the services for the pope,” the reporters note, describing it as a “startlingly fast turnaround for the first overseas trip of a new president.”

The trip “left no time for discussion of his tariffs on the European Union, his turn toward normalizing relations with Russia or his insistence that Europeans must take far larger responsibility for their own defense,” the reporters add.

According to the report, Trump’s “speedy departure came despite a suggestion from a Ukrainian spokesman that more talks would take place in Rome on Saturday.”

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'Gramps having an episode': Trump mocked for vow to bring back holiday that 'never left'

Donald Trump on Sunday promised to "bring back" Columbus Day, but onlookers were quick to point out that it never went anywhere.

Trump over the weekend posted several statements to his social media network, Truth Social. One comment from the President included bad news for his Republican allies.

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'Schumer needs to go': Democrat mocked by the left after sending Trump a 'strong letter'

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) was mocked from his own side of the political aisle on Sunday after proclaiming he sent a "very strong letter" to President Donald Trump.

Schumer over the weekend appeared on CNN, where he was asked about Trump's attacks on Harvard. As for his response, Schumer claimed the following:

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'You will be missed': Trump delivers bad news to GOP lawmakers who want to be by his side

Donald Trump on Sunday delivered bad news to Republican lawmakers who hope to be by his side for a "tremendous day."

Trump over the weekend went on a Truth Social binge, including highlighting what he says is the biggest question being asked in D.C.

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'Biggest question being asked in D.C.': Trump pushes DOJ to probe Dem cash cow in new rant

Donald Trump on Sunday pushed "authorities" to investigate a fundraising infrastructure for Democrats.

Trump over the weekend took to his own social media network, Truth Social, to hurl allegations at the political action committee for Democrats.

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Republicans warned Trump will put them in an 'awful position' choosing his replacement

Looking far ahead at how the 2028 presidential nominations will line up, former Republican party campaign consultant Matthew Dowd predicted Donald Trump will, in all likelihood, put his party in an awful bind.

Reacting to accusations that the president is attempting to "freeze" the field as he flirts with running for a third term despite constitutional prohibitions, Dowd suggested Trump would wait to the last minute to pick his successor, thereby leaving the GOP leadership stuck with whomever he anoints.

Speaking with host Alex Witt on MSNBC, Dowd followed up comments that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez (D-NY) couldn't beat Trump but matched up well with Vice President J.D. Vance.

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

"It's primarily about the grift," he began. "That's the first point of it. But he is freezing the field, one, by virtue of his enormous personality and sway in getting media attention. But he does make other Republicans sort of stop and not do anything in the course of this."

"And I think that's part of his plan because Donald Trump doesn't want to be viewed as sort of the lame duck," he elaborated. "'We're going to to move on, we're going to have another leader emerge.' And I think he's going to try to push that as long as possible."

"I don't think there's any way in anybody's mind that he can constitutionally run, it's specifically forbidden in the Constitution," he claimed. " I think secretaries of states in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Colorado, any number of states won't allow him on the ballot and will be supported by the courts in that. But i think it does put the Republicans in an awful position because they can't come up with their next leader."

He added. "And I think what allows Donald Trump to do is lay his hands on the last, on the last minute, on somebody, and then it puts them in an awful position of them having to rally around a one person that he lays his hands on in the final minute of this, and that's problematic."

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'Cannot be trusted': Newsmax scrambles after Fox News poll shows declining Trump approval

Newsmax hosts made an hourly plea over the weekend for viewers to "vote" in an unscientific online poll after a Fox News survey showed that President Donald Trump's approval rate was plummeting.

"Well, not sure if you saw the news, but Fox News is claiming President Trump is actually declining in the polls," the announcement from Newsmax anchors said nearly hourly on Sunday. "President Trump responded and said Fox News polls cannot be trusted."

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Fox News host hits pro-Christian superintendent for opening door to Satanism in schools

Fox News host Rich Edson warned Oklahoma Superintendent of Schools Ryan Walters that he was "opening the door" for Satanism by pushing for religious-based charter schools.

In a Sunday interview, Walters defended his call for the U.S. Supreme Court to find in favor of taxpayers funding a Catholic charter school.

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'Real War on Christmas': Trump threatens toy industry ahead of holiday shopping season

The “War on Christmas” — once described by Politico as “a never-ending cultural conflict during which traditional, explicitly Christian celebrations of the holiday season are under assault from the sinister forces of secular pluralism” — is a staple of right-wing talking points against Democratic leaders.

But Dean Baker, senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, says the “real War on Christmas” is coming to President Donald Trump’s America — thanks to the president’s tariffs.

Baker referenced an NBC News article detailing the impact of Trump’s trade war on “as much as 75 percent of the toy products [the United States] sells from China.” And industry leaders are sounding the alarm.

READ MORE: Here’s the real reason behind Trump’s 'startlingly fast turnaround' on his trip to Rome

“Christmas is in danger,” Toy Association president and CEO Greg Ahearn told NBC News. Trump’s tariffs, Ahearn explained, slow toy production every time they’re “[racheted] up” on China.

In a statement, White House spokesman Kush Desai told concerned business owners: “If you’re worried about tariffs, the solution is simple. Make your product in America.” But industry officials told NBC News that Chinese manufacturers have a unique combination of expertise, “molds, dyes, labor and safety techniques” that are severely lacking in the U.S. supply chain.

“It would be virtually impossible to replicate the industry’s efficiencies in the U.S. in a reasonable time frame” to service the upcoming Christmas holiday, NBC News reports.

As a Germany-based toy manufacturer, Bruder Toys America is also facing a 10 percent tariff. Company head Beate Caso warned “prices will go up tremendously” and supply will be limited this holiday season.

READ MORE: 'Drowning in hubris': How a conservative legal doctrine — and his own 'stupidity' — could topple Trump

According to NBC News, “the entire industry will face higher costs due to worldwide shipping container shortages as production in China for all products slows down.”

“There will also be limited supply, and then you have to add tariff costs,” Caso explained. “So everything is just going to become more expensive, and consumers will definitely feel that.”