SmartNews

'Chilling': Newspaper hits back at MAGA governor after 'bully' attempt

The Orlando Sentinel editorial board took a firm stance against what it claimed was "intimidation" and "bullying" by the DeSantis administration over its investigation into a charity connected to the governor's wife.

The board reported that it received an unsigned cease-and-desist letter from the Florida Department of Children and Families demanding that reporter Jeffrey Schweers stop his "reporting for a story about funding flowing through Hope Florida, the nonprofit spearheaded by the governor’s wife, Casey."

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GOP is force-feeding Americans 'zombie food': NYT reporter

Officials in President Donald Trump's administration are facing criticism from his supporters after failing to fulfill their promises.

Dan Bongino, Kash Patel and Pam Bondi created their own trap, the New York Times reported. By promoting conspiracy theories and promising to fix them, they've backed themselves into a corner that they can't "fix" something that doesn't exist.

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'Deflamation': Mike Lindell confuses courtroom by mispronouncing 'defamation'

MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell confounded attorneys by repeatedly mispronouncing "defamation" at his trial.

The 2020 election denier took the stand during the second week of trial after being sued by former voting machine executive Eric Coomer.

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'Start arresting!' Bannon calls for locking up officials 'stirring the pot'

MAGA pontificator Steve Bannon claimed that it's time to ignore claims of "authoritarianism" and start locking up government officials who are stoking "civil unrest" in the United States, according to an article in The Spectator.

Bannon told editor Freddy Gray that the left was "calling for [unrest] nationwide," and that "we’re in for another of summer of riots."

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'Manufactured crisis': CA takes Trump to court after 'outrageous overreach'

California is suing President Donald Trump's administration for violating the Constitution by sending in the National Guard to Los Angeles to stop protests against immigration raids, the state's Democratic Attorney General Rob Bonta announced Monday.

“President Trump’s order calling federalized National Guard troops into Los Angeles – over the objections of the Governor and local law enforcement – is unnecessary and counterproductive. It’s also deeply unfair to the members of the National Guard who are hard at work every day protecting our state, preparing for and responding to emergencies, and training so that, if called, they can fight our nation’s wars,” said Bonta.

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'We aren’t alarmed enough': Conservative tears into Trump's LA moves

Americans are "not alarmed enough" by President Donald Trump's federalization of the National Guard to secure Los Angeles, conservative columnist William Kristol claimed in a new piece for The Bulwark.

Kristol invoked President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 that freed "all persons held as slaves," claiming that Trump was trying to undo the historical document's declaration that "the Executive government of the United States, including the military and naval authorities thereof, will recognize and maintain the freedom of said persons."

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'Duped': Report claims Hegseth fired aides based on DOGE staffer's debunked tale

A staffer placed by Elon Musk inside the Department of Defense played a key role in the firing of three top aides that has thrown the agency into upheaval.

Justin Fulcher was installed in the Pentagon as the lead staffer for the Department of Government Efficiency, and four sources familiar with the episode say he suggested that warrantless surveillance conducted by the National Security Agency (NSA) had identified the alleged leakers Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was trying to root out of the department early in his tenure, reported The Guardian.

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'Don't lecture me!' Former Trump Homeland Security head snaps at CNN anchor

Former acting Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Ken Cuccinelli got defensive with CNN anchor Brianna Keilar, asking her “not to lecture him” on the differences between President Donald Trump deploying the National Guard to Los Angeles over the weekend and when National Guard troops were called to the city in back in 1992 by President George H.W. Bush.

“There are four reasons under the Insurrection Act that the president can deploy military,” Cuccinelli said. “Under that act, insurrection is only one of the four. That's the name of the act. But that's only one of the four bases.”

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'As in the Bible': Charlie Kirk rant links protests to 'replacement' of whites

Right-wing influencer Charlie Kirk linked anti-ICE protests in California to a theory that white people are being "replaced" in the United States.

"They all hate Christendom," Kirk said of protesters on his Monday podcast. "They hate Western civilization. They hate what we have built. This is a global movement of freaks."

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'So afraid': At least 16 Senate Republicans now sweating over Trump budget

The House and Senate Republicans are readying for a fight now that the former has passed President Donald Trump's 2026 budget, which he refers to as his "big, beautiful bill." The Senate is readying to give them a wake-up call.

According to Punchbowl News, Senate Republicans are split on what they'll do with the bill. Some think they can pull off getting it passed as is, while others don't see anything passing before Trump's deadline of July 4. The real must-pass date is in August or September, according to a March Congressional Budget Office forecast. That's when the government will run out of money.

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Trump allies go down in flames in attempted takeover of the Washington DC Bar

President Donald Trump's allies made a dash to try and take over the Bar Association for Washington, D.C. — but the effort failed badly.

In March, NBC News reported that two Trump allies were running for the D.C Bar's leadership. Bradley Bondi, Attorney General Pam Bondi's brother, and Alicia Long, who was a deputy to brief interim U.S. Attorney Ed Martin, tried to seize control.

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Supreme Court slammed for trampling on principle conservatives held dear

The Supreme Court ruled Friday that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has access to Social Security data. Bloomberg Opinion columnist Noah Feldman believes that is “one more substantial step in the direction of turning the U.S. into a country like China.”

The columnist claims in China, “the government has a 360-degree view of every aspect of its citizens’ lives.”

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'Standstill': Moody's chief economist admits job report has him 'uncomfortable'

Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi has been looking closer at the May jobs report, which was released last week. The more he examines it, however, the more his concern grows.

In an X thread Monday, Zandi confessed, "The more I cogitate on the May jobs report, released last Friday by the BLS, the more uncomfortable I get about the economy’s prospects. There are a bunch of reasons why."

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