SmartNews

'What side is Trump on?' CNN host pounces as Scott Jennings rushes to fix slip-up

CNN's John Berman confronted a conservative commentator over President Donald Trump's attack on a Republican senator — and he quickly backed down.

The president lashed out at Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) for siding with Democrats to include presidents in a ban on stock trading by members of Congress, even though it wouldn't take effect until after he was out of office, and the "CNN News Central" host asked conservative Scott Jennings to comment on the issue.

Keep reading... Show less

Schumer put on notice to 'sure as hell' not 'get rolled' by the GOP again

With the House out on summer break after Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) vacated the premises to avoid a vote on the Jeffrey Epstein files, Democratic senators are huddling on plans for when the full Congress is back in session.

According to a report from Politico, at a luncheon for Democratic senators on Wednesday attendees "grappled" with how to push back against the Republicans and whether they should forcefully take them on or work to come up with some compromises.

Keep reading... Show less

Woman with wild bat in her mouth hit with crippling medical bills — despite insurance

In retrospect, Erica Kahn realizes she made two big mistakes.

The first was choosing to temporarily forgo health insurance when she was laid off from her job.

Keep reading... Show less

'These are a joke!' Republican lambasted by voter who tricks way onto remote town hall

Republican Rep. Stephanie Bice of Oklahoma on Wednesday night defended her use of remote town halls after a constituent on the call confronted her and accused her of dodging voters.

The question came during a telephone town hall event featuring Republican Reps. Jason Smith of Missouri and Bruce Westerman of Arkansas, who each chair a House committee.

Keep reading... Show less

'Shortest honeymoon ever': Expert warns TX gamble already backfiring as Latinos flee GOP

Texas Republicans are banking on recent gains with Latino voters by redrawing their congressional maps to create four majority-Hispanic districts that seemingly favors GOP candidates.

The state GOP issued redrawn maps in an unusual mid-decade redistricting move at the urging of President Donald Trump and Gov. Greg Abbott, and the move copies a strategy Republicans are carrying out across the county after Latino voters shifted toward Trump last year.

Keep reading... Show less

Rage as Putin ally turns Trump's own insult against him: Tell him 'to watch his words!'

Donald Trump erupted in fury Thursday after Dmitry Medvedev, Vladimir Putin's attack dog and the deputy chair of Russia's security council, delivered a stinging humiliation by invoking the MAGA leader's own derogatory nickname for Joe Biden.

The explosive exchange began when Medvedev mockingly dismissed an ultimatum from Trump demanding Russia reach a Ukraine ceasefire within 10 days or face "debilitating secondary tariffs" on trading partners.

Keep reading... Show less

'Whoa!' MSNBC panel pounces on Trump administration's new Social Security threat

An offhand comment by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent about Social Security at a forum on Wednesday hosted by Breitbart News drew a stunned reaction on MSNBC on Thursday morning.

Addressing a provision contained in the budget bill signed by President Donald Trump that allows for setting up tax-deferred children's investment accounts, also called "Trump accounts," the Cabinet member admitted they are a "back door for privatizing Social Security."

Specifically, Bessent blandly pointed out, "I'm not sure when the distribution level date should be, whether it should it be 30, and you can buy a house, should it be 60. But in a way it is a backdoor for privatizing Social Security."

That earned the billionaire Trump appointee a "Whoa' from MSNBC host Joe Scarborough.

Addressing Rep. Richie Torres (D-NY), the "Morning Joe " host continued, "He said the quiet part out loud. Congressman, so you got this bill and, again, I don't know politics, but you got this bill that slashes health care for the most needy among us. It gives the biggest tax cuts ever to billionaires and multinational corporations, and now the treasury secretary says it creates a way to privatize Social Security. What say you?"

"I think it shows the world what we've long known: that Donald Trump is a snake oil salesman," the New York lawmaker replied. "And, you know, the slogan of Trump has been 'promises made, promises kept.' He made a promise to protect Medicaid, and instead he has cut it by $1 trillion. He made a promise to protect Social Security and now you have his treasury secretary threatening to privatize Social Security."

"And, of course, he made a promise to release the Epstein files and instead, he's broken his promise to his own base. So there's a pattern here?" he added.

"Yeah, there is," Scarborough replied. "And again, Jon Lemire, this is an own goal,to put it mildly, when again, you have this massive bill that's already hugely unpopular that slashes health care, I mean, for people in Red State America for people in rural America, slashes health care there. It slashes health care in Blue State America. It gives tax cuts to billionaires and IT monopolists it. It slashes taxes for multinational corporations and now the treasury secretary says it's going to help us privatize Social Security."

"I mean, you talk about touching all the third rails of American politics at the same time — they've just done it," he suggested.

Co-host Jonathan Lemire replied, "Yeah, and there's a recognition that they did. The treasury secretary, the department, put out a statement a few hours later, running back, not just walking back, but running back it."

"But, yes, for many it was revelatory that this is something that perhaps the Trump administration is going to try to push through," he explained. "To the congressman's point, you know, again, Democrats have been warning about this all along and here we have an extremely influential member of the cabinet suggesting it's a possibility."

You can watch below or at the link.

Keep reading... Show less

'Crumble before our eyes': NC justice warns democracy 'perilously' close to collapse

North Carolina Supreme Court Justice Allison Riggs joined a U.S. Senate “spotlight forum” on voting rights Wednesday to deliver a stark warning to Democratic lawmakers: efforts to throw out ballots and overturn elections are just getting started.

Riggs took part in a two-hour panel convened by Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), ranking member on the Rules Committee, and Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, alongside former Attorney General Eric Holder and other voting rights experts.

Keep reading... Show less

'Too angry, too stupid and too political': Trump flips out in early morning blow-up

President Donald Trump went after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell early Thursday in yet another rant over his continued refusal to drop interest rates, calling him a “total loser” and blaming him for “costing our country trillions of dollars.”

“Jerome ‘too late’ Powell has done it again!” Trump wrote in a post on his social media platform Truth Social.

Keep reading... Show less

Immigrant with prosthetic legs thrown into solitary for griping about flooded cell: report

A Liberian-born double amputee was thrown into solitary confinement at a Georgia immigration detention center after refusing to enter his flooded cell — a move that could have destroyed his battery-powered prosthetic legs and left him unable to walk, according to a report.

Rodney Taylor spent three days in a "restrictive housing unit" at Stewart detention center after guards tried to force him into a cell with an inch of standing water. For Taylor, whose microprocessor-controlled prosthetic legs cannot get wet, entering that cell would have been catastrophic, The Guardian reported.

Keep reading... Show less

'Not a damned penny!' 'Abandoned' Texas flood survivors prepare to clash with officials

Survivors of the deadly July 4 flood in Central Texas are planning to confront state lawmakers next week after their disaster response has left many feeling “abandoned,” The New York Times reported Thursday.

“I get that people have to go home and return to their lives,” said Mike Richards, whose property was ravaged by the flood, speaking to The New York Times. “But you can’t help but feel abandoned.”

Keep reading... Show less

Epstein victim's family appalled by Trump comments: 'It makes us ask if he was aware'

The family of the most prominent survivor of Jeffrey Epstein's abuse was left stunned by President Donald Trump's remarks about her.

The president told reporters aboard Air Force One that his relationship with Epstein ended when he "stole" his Mar-a-Lago employees, and Virginia Giuffre's family told The Atlantic that his comments suggested he knew more about the disgraced financier's sex crimes than he had previously acknowledged.

Keep reading... Show less

Pam Bondi's MAGA 'switcheroo' has left her almost certain to be fired​: DC insider

With the Jeffrey Epstein file controversy still dogging Donald Trump's administration, there is a point where the president will have to throw someone overboard to calm his MAGA base.

That someone is likely to be Attorney General Pam Bondi, according to longtime DC insider Elanor Clift in a new column.

Keep reading... Show less