SmartNews

'My head exploded': Marjorie Taylor Greene joins MAGA host to rip Trump's move on Russia

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and MAGA host Eric Bolling spoke out against President Donald Trump after he ordered nuclear submarines to be re-positioned in response to "highly provocative" comments from a Russian official.

"You hear President Trump saying I'm moving some nuclear subs into the Mediterranean into an area that would be more accessible to what's going on in Russia and Ukraine," Bolling told Greene on his Thursday program.

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'Floored!' White House caught off guard as Epstein dinner plans leak

It was reported on Wednesday that Vice President JD Vance would host a strategy meeting to help determine the White House's response to the Jeffrey Epstein scandal and how to handle the information they have about him and his accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell.

"But now, after significant news coverage of this scheduled meeting, sources say it may be moved, rescheduled, or canceled entirely," said CNN host Kasie Hunt.

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‘Repeal the 19th!’ GOP lawmaker’s daughter who trashed women in politics runs for office

Rep. Andy Biggs' (R-AZ) daughter, Mylie Biggs, once pondered, “I don’t know if I would vote for any female." Now, however, she's asking voters to do exactly that.

The far-right lawmaker's child is seeking a state senate seat, The Phoenix New Times reported Wednesday. "And to hear her tell it, you shouldn’t vote for her because she’s a woman."

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'Left to rot': Farmer reeling over decaying crops as workforce flees ICE raids

President Donald Trump's immigration raids are already having a devastating effect on agriculture, CNN reported on Wednesday, with one farmer in The Dalles, Oregon, seeing huge portions of his cherry crop decay because there's no one to pick them.

Ian Chandler "said he’s built up a loyal seasonal workforce for his Wasco County operation called CE Farm Management, about 90 minutes from Portland, with the same people coming year after year and staying in touch with birth announcements and Christmas cards in between," said the report. "But this year half of them did not arrive, and many of his neighbors were scrambling for pickers too. All told, Chandler said he will lose $250,000-$300,000 of revenue, left to rot on the trees."

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Epstein victim in tears after Trump won't rule out pardoning Ghislaine Maxwell

A sexual abuse victim of Jeffrey Epstein broke down in tears after President Donald Trump refused to rule out a pardon for accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

Actress Alicia Arden spoke out about Trump's decision not to release the Epstein files on Wednesday in a press conference with attorney Gloria Allred.

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Tulsi Gabbard under fire after 'desperate and irresponsible' move to override CIA

Two former CIA officials are concerned about Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and her eagerness to release top secret information that could compromise sources and methods for agents.

The Washington Post reported on Wednesday that Gabbard's indiscriminate way of releasing classified documents regarding Russian interference in the 2016 election angered many career intelligence experts. Gabbard published the information with minimal redactions.

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'Going to cost lives': Trump's ex-surgeon general sounds off on RFK's 'dangerous' move

The decision Tuesday night by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the U.S. Health Secretary, to cut nearly $500 million in federal funding for the development of mRNA vaccines, was too far even for a former Trump surgeon general.

Kennedy halted 22 projects primarily targeting respiratory viruses like COVID-19 and influenza. Federal contracts and proposals with leading pharmaceutical companies — including Pfizer, Moderna, and Sanofi — were affected. Investments managed by the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, or BARDA, were also pulled back.

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The moms who left Texas to defend its future: 'She needs a democracy to grow up in'

When Erin Zwiener finished taking the bar exam last Wednesday afternoon and walked out into the Texas heat, the aspiring lawyer was looking forward to one thing: Enjoying the final days of summer vacation with her daughter before she begins second grade.

Then she checked her phone.

Zwiener is a Democrat in the Texas House of Representatives, where since 2019 she has represented a district south of Austin that includes most of Hays County. She saw missed messages about Texas Republicans’ release earlier that day of a new voting map designed to flip five seats in the U.S. House currently held by Democrats — satisfying a demand that came from Republican President Donald Trump’s White House. Zwiener would need to head to the state Capitol, where her caucus would convene that evening to discuss how to respond.

The meeting extended late into the night, and party leaders presented their options, given their minority status. After weighing the pluses and minuses, more than 50 Democratic lawmakers decided they would leave the state they represent to deprive Republican leaders of the quorum needed to approve the new Trump-requested congressional map. With a special legislative session already underway, most traveled together to Illinois, while others headed to New York and Massachusetts. They would close their summers by playing canaries in the coal mine, delivering the message to key Democratic-led states that GOP redistricting efforts in ruby-red Texas would soon arrive at their doorsteps if they do not take action.

“We can’t go gently, we have to fight,” Zwiener told The 19th earlier this week from New York, where she decamped after holding a Saturday town hall on the proposed redistricting with her constituents.

“I haven't gotten to have much of a summer with [my daughter] because I've been studying for the bar,” she added, “but I had made her a big promise that we would go to a water park after I finished the bar, and I was able to do that this weekend before leaving — so I'm grateful we got to have our big summer adventure.”

The Texas lawmakers are now at the center of a national debate about how Democrats should respond to the White House-driven push to shore up Republicans’ slim and endangered U.S. House majority with unprecedented, mid-decade redistrictings that many believe run afoul of state constitutions.

Though leaders in the Democratic Party are more likely than Republicans to favor nonpartisan redistricting done by commissions and other independent entities, Texas lawmakers like Zwiener are warning that if Democrats do not respond by redrawing maps in Democratic-led states like Illinois, Massachusetts and New York with large left-leaning populations, the GOP will be able to cement a House majority that does not reflect the electorate. It would also allow the Trump administration to avoid accountability: The presidential impeachment process, for example, begins in the House.

“If Texas is going to try and break the democratic process in this way, then other states are going to have to counterbalance that in order for our democracy to survive,” Zwiener said. As they began what she described as “outreach” in their chosen states, Republicans in Missouri indicated they are considering redrawing maps there as well.

“Make no mistake about this,” Zwiener said: “This is an attempt for Donald Trump to avoid accountability in Congress.”

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'Very bad': Nobel-winner Paul Krugman warns Trump economy is a 'bubble'

Nobel Prize-winning economist and political commentator Paul Krugman issued a dire warning in his new Substack post, published Wednesday: the stock market is currently not properly pricing in the risk of President Donald Trump's economic chaos — and when it finally does, things will get ugly fast.

Krugman, a frequent critic of the president and advocate for more liberal economic policies, said that Wall Street performance doesn't at all reflect what is going on.

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Trump official's speech devolves into mockery as hijacked audio plays circus music

Education Secretary Linda McMahon was disrupted Wednesday during a conservative student conference in Washington, D.C. by an apparent audio hijacking, during which a recording of a voice calling McMahon a “corrupt billionaire” could be heard, as well as circus music and the theme from the popular sitcom “Arrested Development.”

Tapped by President Donald Trump to lead the Education Department last November, McMahon is the wife of billionaire professional wrestling promoter Vince McMahon, and previously launched two failed bids for Senate after personally spending more than $100 million on her campaigns.

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'Simply because I’m brown': Police probe council member's citizenship after anonymous call

LENEXA — Melanie Arroyo lives in two worlds.

There’s the one where the Lenexa City Council member has to “assimilate and perform” like her white counterparts, she said. Then there’s the authentic world, where she is aware of how vulnerable she is in this country, “simply because I’m brown and because I have an accent.”

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'Trump has betrayed us': Candace Owens attacks Trump as 'deep state' president

Right-wing podcaster Candace Owens said that President Donald Trump "betrayed" his MAGA supporters by becoming part of the "deep state" after refusing to release files on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

During a Wednesday interview with conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, Owens declared that "Bibi Netanyahu is president of the United States."

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'Logistical nightmare' awaits Trump if his tariff promises fall apart: report

Donald Trump has staked a great part of his second shot at making America great again on promises that his tariff war will flood the U.S. Treasury with money and ease American consumers' suffering.

That could all fall apart if a federal appeals court and then the Supreme Court rule that he has usurped authority from Congress. The government would then have to refund affected parties, something that would be hard to unwind.

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