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Trump officials cite security risks as they scramble to halt president's new deals: report

President Donald Trump spent much of his four-day trip to the Middle East securing business deals, like the $600 billion investment pledge by the Saudis that Trump is trying to push to $1 trillion.

Among the agreements, "The American chip giants Nvidia and AMD will now be allowed to sell advanced chips to Saudi, Emirati and Qatari customers as those countries seek to become powerhouses in artificial intelligence. One customer is an enormous new A.I. campus in Abu Dhabi whose ambitions rival Stargate, the OpenAI-led venture, in size," The New York Times reported.

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'The Supreme Court is being played!' Trump claims top justices being 'intimidated' by Dems

President Donald Trump doubled down on his displeasure with the Supreme Court Friday morning.

“THE SUPREME COURT IS BEING PLAYED BY THE RADICAL LEFT LOSERS, WHO HAVE NO SUPPORT, THE PUBLIC HATES THEM, AND THEIR ONLY HOPE IS THE INTIMIDATION OF THE COURT, ITSELF. WE CAN’T LET THAT HAPPEN TO OUR COUNTRY!” The President posted on Truth Social.

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'Huge scandal': Internal documents catch Trump admin in massive Social Security lie

An internal Trump administration document reportedly shows that anti-fraud checks recently installed at the Social Security agency have found just two cases of potentially improper benefit claims out of more than 110,000—a rate of 0.0018%.

The documents, first reported Thursday by Nextgov/FCW, further undercut President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk's narrative that Social Security is brimming with fraud. Musk falsely claimed in March that "40% of the calls into Social Security were fraudulent."

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'She's no longer hot': Trump releases new morning observation about Taylor Swift

President Donald Trump took to Truth Social, railing against singer Taylor Swift.

“Has anyone noticed that, since I said ‘I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT,’ she’s no longer ‘HOT?’” Trump posted to his social media platform.

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Trump email ordered 15K workers to snitch on colleagues. Not one responded

Days after President Donald Trump was sworn in for his second term, the acting head of the Environmental Protection Agency sent an email to the entire workforce with details about the agency’s plans to close diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives and included a plea for help.

“Employees are requested to please notify” the EPA or the Office of Personnel Management, the federal government’s human resources agency, “of any other agency office, sub-unit, personnel position description, contract, or program focusing exclusively on DEI,” the email from then-acting Administrator James Payne said.

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Kash Patel is 'leaving the door wide open' to spies with his latest move: analysis

Espionage from 1985 is still affecting ongoing FBI and CIA operations today, and FBI director Kash Patel's latest moves, or lack thereof, could have a ripple effect for generations to come, according to a Politico report.

“There was a gut-wrenching sense of free fall,” Michael Sellers told Politico. In 1985, Sellers was an American diplomat living in the Soviet Union and saw, first-hand, the “bloodbath” that espionage can cause.

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Trump aides should be 'concerned' as 'death spiral' looms over president: polling expert

In an interview with the New York Times' Frank Bruni, two notable pollsters claimed Donald Trump has his work cut out for him to get his approval numbers up.

According to one pollster, Trump is not caught up in a "death spiral" but he is pushing his luck.

Discussing voters' attitudes about the job the president is doing with the economy –– a central plank of Trump's appeal in the 2024 election –– Republican pollster Kristen Soltis Anderson warned the president and the GOP, "I would be concerned about some of the softness I am seeing in numbers around areas like the economy that used to be real strengths for Trump."

ALSO READ: 'Sad white boys': Fear as Trump terror adviser shrugs off threat from 'inside the house'

She added, "If it ends up fine, this will be something of a distant memory come the 2026 midterms. 'If' is doing a huge amount of work in that sentence."

According to pollster Nate Silver, Trump's approval numbers have seen a slight rebound, but that could change quickly once the damage being created by Trump's trade war hits consumers' pocketbooks.

Noting the president's controversial tariffs "have produced some of the lowest consumer confidence numbers since the 2008 recession," Silver stated "Trump has somewhat backed off the tariffs, the hard economic data hasn’t been as bad as consumer attitudes, and the stock market has rebounded."

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'Where is the alarm?' NY Times hammered over major GOP school segregation report

Republicans are pushing to end the remaining school desegregation orders mandated after the U.S. Supreme Court's landmark 1954 ruling in Brown v. Board of Education, and many were puzzled by the New York Times' framing of its report on the issue.

More than 300 desegregation orders remain on the books from the 1960s and 1970s, when federal courts were given supervision over school districts that refused to integrate, and Republicans have found allies in the Trump administration to roll back federal orders they say are outdated and no longer necessary, as the Times reported.

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'They're not trying to conceal anything': Jim Jordan scrambles to defend Trump

House Judiciary Committee chair Jim Jordan (R-OH) has rushed to Donald Trump's defense over concerns about a $400 million jet that the government of Qatar wants to gift to the president for his use while in office and beyond.

In an interview with NOTUS, the far-right Jordan was joined by House Oversight Committee chair James Comer in insisting that there is nothing suspicious at all about Trump taking possession of the jet that has been described as a "palace in the sky" while at the same time defending their pursuit of Hunter Biden who held no position in the U.S. government.

Speaking with Riley Rogerson, Comer blew off concerns the president is being manipulated with a glib, "Everything Trump has done has been transparent,” and Jordan, an ardent Trump defender in his own right agreed.

ALSO READ: 'Sad white boys': Fear as Trump terror adviser shrugs off threat from 'inside the house'

With Comer adding, “If they had given Joe Biden a plane, he would have denied it and would have said I was lying. And you all would have attacked me for accusing him of getting the plane," Jordan offered, "Don’t heads of state get gifts given to them all the time by other heads of state?”

Skipping over plans for the jet to become part of the Trump library after the president leaves office, Jordan added, "I don’t see a concern with the leader of our country accepting a gift from some other head of state or other country that’s with the benefit of the country.”

Pressed on the disposition of the plane after Trump is out of office, the Ohio Republican replied, "It would be the library; it wouldn’t be to President Trump personally.”

“The reason that many people refer to the Bidens as ‘the Biden crime family’ is because they were doing all this stuff behind curtains, but in the back rooms, they were trying to conceal it and they repeatedly lied about it and they set up shell companies, and the family was all engaged in getting all on the dole,” House Speaker Mike Johnson explained in a separate interview. "Whatever President Trump is doing is out in the open. They are not trying to conceal anything.”

You can read more here.

Trump's latest firing hits wave of GOP opposition: 'Betrays lack of understanding'

Senate Republicans are not happy about President Donald Trump’s decision to fire Cameron Hamilton, the acting director of Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), according to The Hill.

Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) is one of the many voices who are disappointed to see Hamilton go.

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Amy Coney Barrett is 'validating' hints she has 'left the Trump side': analyst

Reacting to conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett jumping in and siding with liberal Justice Elena Kagan during a hearing on birthright citizenship, a CNN analyst noted her tendency of late to deviate from the policies of the man who gave her a lifetime appointment to the Supreme Court.

Sitting on a panel with host Audie Cornish, CNN analyst Edward-Isaac Dovere sat and listened to clips of Coney Barrett grilling Donald Trump's Solicitor General John Sauer about the president's executive order which is at the heart of the historic legal case.

Following the clip, host Cornish asked, "I'm going to translate a little. There's been this conversation about whether there can be kind of class action lawsuits, and that's the way people can get relief rather than going to a judge in any particular state. But it's the tone, right? Let's pretend we don't know the words, but the tone of her jumping in and saying, are you really going to do that? What did you hear in these moments?"

ALSO READ: Trump's top spy chief blasted as Raw Story exposes 'crazy' cash grab

"I would say that from years of watching or listening to supreme court proceedings and trying to guess where they're going, we should all learn that," Dovere offered. "It's a tricky game."

"Amy Coney Barrett was put on the Supreme Court by Donald Trump," he reminded the panel. "She is a has a pretty strong record of voting in the way that one would expect a Trump nominee to vote. On decisions she has diverged a little bit, but not in this way that gets her –– that seems to me to validate this idea that she has completely left the Trump side."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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Republican lawmaker blasts Marjorie Taylor Greene as 'replaceable' amid GOP civil war

One of the Republican House majority's most vulnerable members called out Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) in an escalating civil war.

Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY) has been insisting on substantially raising the deduction on so-called SALT taxes – state and local taxes – as Republicans try to pass the "big, beautiful bill" sought by president Donald Trump, and debate on the issue has pitted swing-state GOP lawmakers who represent wealthier areas against rural Republicans who represent less affluent rural districts, reported Politico.

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Shock move earns Trump accusations of sheltering white supremacism

U.S. officials who specialize in terrorism prevention are bracing for their office to be eliminated or broken up as the State Department readies to root out what Secretary Marco Rubio calls a “radical political ideology” embedded in a “sprawling bureaucracy.”

The plan to eliminate the Office of Countering Violent Extremism (CVE), along with offices that further human rights and prevent war crimes, was first reported by the Free Press. Rubio appeared to confirm the reporting, sharing a link and describing “the real exclusive on how we’re making the State Department Great Again.”

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