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'People are hurting out here': Mike Johnson’s constituents turn on him over Medicaid

Even residents of House Speaker Mike Johnson's (R-La.) deep-red congressional district are voicing their displeasure with House Republicans' efforts to gut funding for Medicaid.

NBC News reported Wednesday that rural Louisiana voters in the southwestern portion of the state that Johnson represents are now calling on the speaker to prioritize the program that provides health insurance for low-income Americans. The Rev. Leroy McClelland told the network he has several medical issues and depends on safety net programs like Medicaid and food stamps — both of which would be cut in the Republican budget — to make ends meet.

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Trump Cabinet secretary could be 'forced to take the fall' for tariff chaos: report

Financial markets are still reeling from this week's back-and-forth with the United States' key trade partners, as President Donald Trump announced and then almost immediately withdrew crippling new tariffs.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed Tuesday down another 478 points, down 1.1%. Trading on the S&P 500 closed after a decline of 0.7%, and the Nasdaq Composite was down 0.2%, for the worst day of trading since September according to Yahoo Finance. The stock market has been sliding amid fears that consumer spending would contract in response to tariffs Trump announced would be going into effect on Canada and Mexico in particular. While those tariffs have been reversed for now, Trump has indicated that 50% tariffs on imported steel and aluminum from Canada will still go into effect early Wednesday morning at midnight.

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‘Chilling’: Trump White House blames Biden amid recession alarms and market nosedive

It’s Monday, March 10, and Donald Trump has been president for 50 days. The stock market continues its steep decline, with the Dow losing nearly 2,500 points over the past month. Today, it closed down nearly 900 points—after losing over 1100—reportedly due in large part to the uncertainty surrounding Trump’s tariffs, their chaotic implementation, and concerns over the possible recession they may bring. Meanwhile, a government shutdown looms. If Congress fails to reach a budget deal by midnight Friday—and President Trump has barely addressed the issue in public—the federal government will shut down at 12:01 AM on Saturday. While Congressional Republicans will likely need some Democratic votes, and it’s unclear how many, if any, they can count on, some political commentators are warning that Speaker Johnson is “devising a trap for congressional Democrats.”

You would not know any of this if you just walked through President Trump’s Truth Social page, where he spent an hour on Monday afternoon posting links to right-wing and far-right websites praising the “Trump effect,” claiming Trump is “rebuilding domestic manufacturing” (something President Joe Biden actually did,) bragging about the historically low number of migrants ICE apprehended at the Southwest border (he said he would deport millions), claiming his tariffs will not cause inflation (despite economists’ warnings), quoting his border “czar” saying he will “bring hell” to sanctuary cities, boasting that European nations are boosting their militaries (because they see the U.S. as aligning with Russia and hence unreliable), and posting a screenshot claiming he has the highest approval rating since being inaugurated (despite reliable polls saying the opposite).

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‘You’re not supposed to be asking that’: Trump refuses to answer questions about Musk

President Donald Trump lashed out at an NBC News reporter during a Friday afternoon Q&A in the Oval Office, refusing to answer questions about Elon Musk, who serves as a Senior Advisor to the President. Musk has been widely regarded as leading the controversial Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which President Trump has also indicated.

During his address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, President Trump praised the billionaire Tesla tech tycoon, declaring, “I have created the brand-new Department of Government Efficiency, DOGE — perhaps you’ve heard of it,” before adding, “Which is headed by Elon Musk, who is in the gallery tonight.”

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DOGE employee accidentally set his Google Calendar to 'public' — here’s what’s on it

The people behind centibillionaire Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) are largely unknown to the public. However, two journalists recently found a public Google Calendar for one DOGE staffer that sheds light on how the quasi-agency operates.

Business Insider's Jack Newsham and Alice Tecotzky recently discovered that 26-year-old Riley Sennott, who is listed as a "senior advisor" at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), had set his Google Calendar to "public" despite deleting his LinkedIn account and setting his X account to private. Newsham and Tecotzky noted that Sennott's affiliation with DOGE has not been previously reported, and the outlet noted that all of Sennott's appointments dating back to 2016 were publicly visible. After Business Insider contacted Sennott for comment, his Google Calendar was reportedly set to private within an hour.

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'Public will turn against you': Top GOP pollster shares major 'opportunity' for Dems

During recent town hall meetings, Republican members of Congress have been faced with angry constituents who are particularly upset about President Donald Trump's mass layoffs of federal workers. One Republican pollster thinks Democrats may be able to exploit this anger in the 2026 midterms — if they have a disciplined message.

In a Monday interview on CNN, Frank Luntz — a Republican messaging expert who regularly conducts focus groups with swing voters — noted that heated town hall appearances can sometimes be a harbinger of whether the opposition will make big gains in the next midterm election. He mentioned the 2010 Tea Party wave election and the 2018 "Blue Wave" during Trump's first term as examples. But he said that Democrats should keep in mind that voters' anger isn't with Trump's agenda per se, but rather his execution.

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'They were prepared': GOP lawmaker says quiet part out loud about Trump’s agenda

The fact that President Donald Trump moved with lightning speed in signing dozens of executive orders and naming members of his Cabinet was no surprise to one House Republican, who recently made a revealing comment about why Trump's second term is moving much quicker than his first.

Talking Points Memo reported Monday that Rep. John Rose (R-Tenn.) had a simple explanation when asked why Trump has moved at a breakneck pace just a little over 40 days into his second term: Project 2025. Rose, who is running for governor of the Volunteer State in 2026, told local publication Nashville Scene that the far-right Heritage Foundation's 900-plus page blueprint for a second Trump administration was the key strategic playbook for the 47th president and his team.

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'Highly personal hatred': Ex-GOP insider accuses Trump of 'self-sabotage' against the U.S.

After U.S. President Donald Trump angrily berated visiting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during a Friday, February 28 meeting in the White House Oval Office, many Democrats responded with scathing criticism of Trump and Vice President JD Vance.

But some criticism came from the right as well.

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'Treasonous': Trump investigates public media reporters for criticizing his administration

Several journalists employed by an outlet funded by the U.S. government have found themselves in President Donald Trump's crosshairs, according to a new report.

In a Friday article, the New York Times reported that one longtime journalist at Voice of America (VOA) — which is funded by Congress through the U.S. Agency for Global Media (AGM) — had been put on an extended "excused absence" pending a human resources investigation following a tweet flagged by Trump advisor Richard Grenell. VOA chief national correspondent Steve Herman said the investigation was meant to determine whether his "social media activity has undermined VOA's audiences’ perceptions of the objectivity and/or credibility of VOA and its news operations."

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'Going to own it': GOP strategist says this issue may be Trump’s 'canary in the coal mine'

President Donald Trump may quickly get himself mired in an issue that could put him at odds with his base, according to one Republican strategist.

NBC News reported Thursday that the fallout from an unvaccinated school-aged child in Lubbock, Texas dying from the measles may come with a political cost for Republicans. One unnamed GOP strategist who has worked on House, Senate and presidential campaigns told the network that the ongoing measles outbreak, combined with the appointment of anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary, poses a particular risk to House Republicans in swing districts.

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'Burn it all down': George Conway issues scathing takedown of Trump and GOP’s core belief

Now that President Donald Trump's second term is in its second month, conservative attorney George Conway is arguing that his central guiding philosophy — along with that of his supporters in the GOP — is now crystal clear.

During a Tuesday interview on MSNBC, former Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele asked Conway (the former spouse of ex-Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway) if he's seen anything change in the administration's approach to governing since Trump's second term began. Conway opined that Republicans "just want to burn it all down."

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‘Grave moral evil’: Republicans are moving to impeach judges over anti-DOGE rulings

Far-right House Republicans are pushing to impeach federal judges, alleging “high crimes and misdemeanors” in response to rulings that opposed actions by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). One congressman denounced a judge as a “predator” and a “radical anti-LGBTQ activist,” while another argued that blocking DOGE reflected bias against Trump voters. A third asserted that Congress has the “authority to impeach judges to defend the will of the people.”

Courthouse News reporter Benjamin S. Weiss notes that three federal judges have been targeted for impeachment by multiple members of Congress.

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'Stunning shift': Critics warn US vote signaled its joining of 'Axis of Evil'

The Trump administration is facing widespread criticism for aligning with authoritarian regimes—including Russia, North Korea, Belarus, and Hungary—by opposing a United Nations resolution condemning Russian aggression against Ukraine.

Calling it “a stunning shift from years of US policy,” CNN reported that Monday’s vote by the United States “against the Ukrainian and European-backed resolution saw the US at odds with its longtime European allies and instead aligned with the aggressor in the war on the three-year anniversary of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.”

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