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Iran called Trump's bluff — and now he's spiraling and 'out of ideas': expert

None of President Donald Trump's usual bailouts are coming after he launched a war on Iran, and the situation has quickly spiraled out of his control.

The 79-year-old president has long relied on lies, bluster and escalation to stay one step ahead of consequences in his business, political, and personal life, but those tactics are proving woefully ineffective against the global energy market that's been choked off by Iran in response to the military operation he impulsively authorized, wrote political scientist Nicholas Grossman for MS NOW.

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Alarms as Trump's affordable housing official crowdfunds his own down payment

A Department of Housing and Urban Development staffer tasked with sourcing affordable home solutions is asking for help buying his home.

Benjamin Hobbs, the assistant secretary for public and Indian housing, has listed a donations pot for a down payment on a house as part of his Zola wedding registry. While not an out-there request, with the Washington Post reporting 87% of Zola customers asking for some form of cash gift and a further 39% specifically for a house down payment, an ethics board believes Hobbs' request could be a breach.

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'Walls closing in': Eyebrows raised as GOP-led House subpoenas Bondi over Epstein files

Reactions started rolling in Tuesday after a Republican-led House panel said it would subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi in connection with the Department of Justice regarding the agency's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files, according to reports.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) wrote in a letter that Bondi was slated to be deposed on April 14, CNBC reported. The move came after five Republicans joined Democrats to support a motion forcing the attorney general to testify. Lawmakers were expected to question Bondi about the DOJ's compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which President Donald Trump signed into law in November.

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'MAGA shrunk': Pro-Trump pollster warns there's no good midterm news for GOP

Pro-MAGA pollster Rich Baris of Big Data Polls struggled to offer good news about the midterms to the Charlie Kirk show hosts, Andrew Kolvet and Blake Neff.

"So, you know, Rich, but like that, you're talking about 2028. What about the midterms?" Kolvet asked on a Tuesday podcast. "I mean, there's, you know, you've had Joe Kent leaving this morning announcing his, his departure from the administration... We've got affordability. There's economic things to consider. Most people just care about how much money they have in their wallet at the end of the month."

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ICE rookie blames jargon for 'serious mistake' that led to wrongful detention

A “rookie” officer with Immigration and Customs Enforcement admitted in court that his “lack of experience" led to the “unlawful” detention of a longtime California resident, a "critical error" he later apologized for, The Washington Post reported on Tuesday.

Hired last summer during the Trump administration’s hiring blitz, ICE officer Nolan De Long was involved in the arrest of 55-year-old Carlos De La Garza last December, less than one month into his new job. De Long was tasked with filling out a report on Garza’s arrest – known as a Form I-213 – but due to what he told a court was his “lack of experience,” had filled out the form incorrectly.

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'Funny how that works': Nobel-winner warns Trump's allies won't help him out of 'trap'

A new brief of tariffs from the Trump administration could be the worst yet, according to Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman.

Krugman warned that new tariffs set to be introduced by the president's team will affect not just U.S. citizens but the world, as he lashes out at NATO for not helping with the war in Iran. The economist believes a proposed tariff on 60 countries, including members of the European Union, Canada, and the United Kingdom, will cruelly hinder economies across the world during a time of domestic crisis.

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'Blindsided' judge hurls Trump DOJ prosecutor out of court in mid-hearing blow-up

A dramatic courtroom confrontation erupted this week when Judge Zahid N. Quraishi threw top prosecutor Mark Coyne out of his New Jersey courtroom and demanded answers about who's really running the U.S. attorney's office, according to a new report.

The scene unfolded during a child pornography sentencing hearing Monday, adding to deepening tensions between the Trump administration's Justice Department and federal judges. The judge grew increasingly frustrated with Coyne's presence and fired pointed questions at junior prosecutor Daniel Rosenblum about whether former interim U.S. attorney Alina Habba maintained hidden control over office operations, The New York Times reported Tuesday.

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'Absurd': Chief Justice John Roberts insists judges don't carry out Trump's will

U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts insisted that members of the court did not follow the ideology of the president who appointed them.

During a Tuesday discussion at Rice University, Roberts sought to dispel the notion that Justice Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, or Amy Coney Barrett would defer to President Donald Trump because he nominated them.

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Republicans set to get a 'wake-up' call on Trump at the worst possible moment: analyst

Republicans who will be out of power and, in some cases, out of a job will look back on how they let President Donald Trump use his bully pulpit to pursue his own interests while leaving them “holding the bag” with furious voters.

That was the lesson delivered by Politico’s Jonathan Martin on MS NOW Tuesday, where he vociferously asserted that GOP lawmakers are headed for a disaster in November.

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Trump goofs as he sneers at Irish president in front of diplomat: 'Lucky I exist'

Donald Trump’s attack on the president of Ireland in front of Irish Taoiseach Micheal Martin in the Oval Office hit a rough patch on Tuesday afternoon.

As the president jumped from topic to topic, he was pressed about comments made by the Irish president who stated, “The normalization of war can never be accepted. Now, more than ever, we must renew our commitment to peace and diplomacy in line with the principles of international law as set out in the United Nations charter.”

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Postal Service may be forced to stop deliveries by 2027 amid cash crisis

The U.S. Postal Service may be forced to stop deliveries next year if current trends continue, according to the postmaster general.

Postmaster General David Steiner told lawmakers this week that the Postal Service was on track to run out of cash to pay employees and vendors unless major changes were made, reported NPR.

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Amazon grilled over suspicion Melania doc broke bribery laws

A documentary on Melania Trump has prompted calls for a probe into the financial donations from Amazon to Donald Trump

Representatives signed a letter to the E-commerce company asking where the funding came from and suggesting money given to the Trump team for the film could have breached bribery laws. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Rep. Hank Johnson (D-GA) led the charge on the letter, with calls for Amazon to answer questions on the sum of money given to the team behind the Melania documentary.

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This 80-year-old Trump school pal is urging him to seize control of elections: 'He has to'

An octogenarian former classmate of President Donald Trump is urging him to overturn two and a half centuries of election law and take control of this November's vote.

Peter Ticktin, an 80-year-old South Florida lawyer who met Trump at New York Military Academy, told Vanity Fair that he has advised the 79-year-old president to issue an executive order that would allow him to seize control of the midterm election.

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