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Dems are finally challenging Trump at his own attention-seeking game: analysis

Michelle Obama famously said of Republican tactics, "When they go low, we go high," but Democrats seem to be finally abandoning that philosophy to take President Donald Trump on at his own game, according to an article in The Bulwark.

Reporter Lauren Egan wrote that "Democrats are beginning to understand the dimensions and demands of the attention economy, in which the real currency in politics is not message discipline but message dominance."

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Heart-wrenching search turns up kids' toys strewn along TX flood devastation

"“You can’t replace memories”: Volunteers seek to return personal items after Texas floods" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

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Democrats walk out of 'sham' vote for Trump lawyer: 'This is unbelievable!'

Democratic members of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee walked out of the meeting on Thursday as the committee prepared to vote for President Donald Trump's personal lawyer to become a judge for the Third Circuit Court of Appeals.

Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) remained for a few moments, where he lectured Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA) for refusing to allow statements before the vote.

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CNN host forces GOP lawmaker to admit he voted for tax hike in Trump's bill

A Republican congressman was forced to admit that he had voted for President Donald Trump's budget bill containing a provision that he now wants to repeal.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act contains a tax increase for gamblers, who must now pay income taxes on 10 percent of their losses, and Rep. Mark Amodei (R-NV) is joining an effort by Rep. Dina Titus (D-NV) to repeal the provision, although he was the only Nevada lawmaker to vote in favor of it.

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Ron DeSantis backtracks on promise to build second Alligator Alcatraz

Gov. Ron DeSantis appears to be cooling off, for now at least, on a plan to build a second state-run immigrant detention center at the Florida National Guard training site in Clay County.

The governor won’t consider building another temporary detention facility at the Camp Blanding Joint Training Center until the one in the Everglades reaches capacity, saying during a Wednesday press conference in Tampa that the existing site could easily fit 3,000 to 4,000 people.

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'Melania is going to have to testify': MAGA host predicts GOP plan backfire

Conservative Newsmax host Marc Lotter predicted First Lady Melania Trump would be forced to testify if Republicans go through with a plan to subpoena former First Lady Jill Biden.

During a Thursday interview, Lotter confronted Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ) about an investigation into former President Joe Biden's mental health.

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'Major friction': Trump challenged by 10 GOP senators in school funds fight back

WASHINGTON — Republican members of the U.S. Senate called on Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought in a letter Wednesday to release the $6.8 billion in funds for K-12 schools that the Trump administration is withholding.

The letter marked a major friction point between President Donald Trump and influential lawmakers in his own party as his administration tests the limits of the executive branch’s authority in clawing back federal dollars Congress has already appropriated. Every state has millions in school funding held up as a result of the freeze.

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'He's just mad': GOP leader pressures Mike Johnson as speaker faces 'brutal' day

A member of the House Republican leadership team is growing impatient with Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) for not wrapping up negotiations within his own caucus on the massive budget bill awaiting Donald Trump's signature.

According to a report from Politico's Mia McCarthy, the leadership had to work late in the night –– in conjunction with Trump –– to get members to fall in line on three crypto bills headed for a vote on Thursday.

That is being done under pressure from Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-OK) who is reportedly "irate" that Johnson may not wrap up more negotiations before the weekend for a final vote.

According to McCarthy, "The crypto crash-out now leaves the House with a lot to do in very little time: The three crypto bills, the Defense appropriations bill and a rescissions package were all scheduled to get a vote this week," adding that one insider claimed Cole, "... is just mad — I don’t blame him."

The report adds there is a "... lot to cram into less than two days, especially with the rescissions deadline looming Friday night. If they get too close to the deadline, it’s possible Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries — fresh off of an eight-hour 'magic minute' speech two weeks ago — could try to blow past it."

For Cole, the big sticking point has been getting the Defense appropriations bill and the rescissions package scheduled for a vote this week, when some members wanted to kick the can on the defense portion into next week.

You can read more here in the article: Brutal day ahead for Mike Johnson.

'We asked and we asked': GOP 'stonewalled' on details of massive cuts

In the early hours of Thursday morning, Senate Republicans passed legislation that would claw back $9 billion in previously approved congressional funding for public broadcasting and foreign aid programs targeted by President Donald Trump's White House.

The final vote count was 51 to 48, with Sens. Susan Collins (R-ME) and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) joining Democrats in opposing the package, which now heads back to the GOP-controlled House for final passage. The legislation would cement some of the Trump administration's lawless, unilateral attacks on programs approved by Congress with bipartisan support.

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GOP lawmaker puts Trump on notice that he may 'lose the majority this midterm'

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) gave a stark warning to President Donald Trump Thursday that further inter-party attacks will likely see Republicans “lose the majority this midterm.”

“Attacking republicans who lean independent or libertarian is how Republicans (Trump) will lose the majority this midterm,” Massie wrote in a social media post Thursday on X.

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'Trump is in denial': Ex-senator says president's own 'monster' eating him alive

In an attempt to explain why Donald Trump is not only letting the Jeffrey Epstein files controversy consume the news cycle but is also making things worse with his statements, one former lawmaker suggested he can't face reality.

On Wednesday, in the face of withering attacks from his MAGA base that he is betraying them by letting his Department of Justice sit on the Epstein files and claiming there is nothing of interest, Trump floated a file "hoax" conspiracy theory. Later in the day, the administration fired the prosecutor in the federal case against Epstein.

That has only inflamed critics which led MSNBC's Jonathan Lemire to ask ex-Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) about the series of missteps.

"Let's talk about the politics of this," he prompted his guest.

"It is so rare to have a MAGA backlash," she admitted. "I was talking to a person very close to President Trump last night who made the note that one of the things that really angered Trump is he feels like, whether it was the lawmakers who rode his coattails to office or these podcaster types who have made a lot of money off of Trump's name, we know how angry Trump gets when he feels like people are profiting off of him."

"Those are the same people, in his estimation, who are betraying him now, who are not listening to his edict: 'Hey, stop talking about Jeffrey Epstein. Let's talk about the big beautiful bill or whatever it might be.' There's rare defiance here."

"What do you make of this sort of new moment?" Lemire pressed.

"Well, the bottom line is these folks who are making money off Trump are doing so because 83 percent of the Republican base agree that this is a problem," she replied. "Trump is in denial that he has got a revolt. And I mean, this is just maybe some basic advice: when you're in that kind of situation politically, probably not a good idea to call all your supporters stupid because they know he has been part of feeding this monster, and now the monster is strong and it believes what he has said and what his supporters have said for years."

You can watch below or at the link.

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CNN busts Trump for a new 'colorful story' that 'couldn't possibly be true'

CNN's Daniel Dale fact-checked President Donald Trump over an imaginary tale he told about his uncle and the infamous Unabomber.

The president frequently boasts about his late uncle John Trump, who taught electrical engineering for decades at the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), but he regaled supporters this week with bizarre claims about the late terrorist Ted Kacziynski being one of his students.

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'It's always been nonsense': John Roberts' long-running claim blown up by editor

Chief Justice John Roberts claims to be a moderate but is in fact in Donald Trump's pocket, according to a Salon editor.

Alex Galbraith, Salon's nights and weekends editor, is also author of the outlet's free daily newsletter, Crash Course. On Thursday, Crash Course took aim at Roberts, whom it says "has overseen the death of the Voting Rights Act, the end of abortion protections in the United States and the last semblance of potential consequences for criminal American presidents."

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