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Trump admin pressured African nations to win contracts for Elon Musk

In early February, Sharon Cromer, U.S. ambassador to Gambia, went to visit one of the country’s Cabinet ministers at his agency’s headquarters, above a partially abandoned strip mall off a dirt road. It had been two weeks since President Donald Trump took office, and Cromer had pressing business to discuss. She needed the minister to fall in line to help Elon Musk.

Starlink, Musk’s satellite internet company, had spent months trying to secure regulatory approval to sell internet access in the impoverished West African country. As head of Gambia’s communications ministry, Lamin Jabbi oversees the government’s review of Starlink’s license application. Jabbi had been slow to sign off and the company had grown impatient. Now the top U.S. government official in Gambia was in Jabbi’s office to intervene.

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'Trump is taking a risk': President already prepping for 'backfire' of his latest big move

President Donald Trump took a risk on his Middle East trip, and it could be disastrous, according to a CNN analysis.

Written by Stephen Collinson, who believes there was a lot of “substance” that happened on the trip but lifting sanctions on Syria could backfire.

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'Wow! Wow!' CNN anchor rendered speechless by example of threats posed by Trump's gift jet

CNN's Kate Bolduan was moved to a double-wow reaction to a veteran national security official's explanation of the risks posed by President Donald Trump accepting a luxury jet from a foreign nation.

The president is facing bipartisan backlash for accepting a $400 million Boeing 747-8 "flying palace" from the Qatar royal family, and Brett McGurk, who served as a diplomat and national security official for multiple presidents, said the gift was undercutting Trump's overseas trip to the Middle East.

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'It does nothing': Trump's 'surreal parallel universe' plan burned down on MSNBC

According to financial analyst Steve Rattner, Donald Trump's executive order demanding prescription drug prices must go down was a nothing-burger that is not worth the paper it was written on.

Appearing on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," Rattner pointed to the signing by Trump, who called it one of the most "consequential" moves of his presidency, as another "surreal, parallel universe Trump moment."

"He was going to lower prescription prescription drug prices by 30 to 80 percent, the executive order actually does nothing," he told the MSNBC hosts. "He doesn't have the authority to do any of those things."

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"But then he said just recently, I heard it on [MSNBC's] 'Way Too Early' this morning out in the Middle East, wherever he is, that a lot of Democrats are going to vote for this tax bill, going through Ways and Means because it was going to lower drug prices," he added before bluntly stating, "There's nothing in the tax bill that would lower drug prices."

"So the president is off on one universe and the world is on a different universe, and he is talking about a world that does exist," he pointed out.

"Why do you have Americans actually traveling around to other countries to buy drugs?" co-host Joe Scarborough asked.

"That's a great question, Joe," Rattner replied. "And there are really two reasons for it. One reason for it is because most other countries, take Britain for example which has national health insurance, they negotiate with the drug companies for the whole country at one time. And they basically say 'Here's what we're willing to pay.' The drug companies don't have as much leverage, so they lower their prices. "

"Whereas our system where, of course you have Medicare or Medicaid, you have private insurance. You have people paying for it on their own. We have a very fragmented system. So there's no equally large force operating against the drug companies," he elaborated.

You can watch below or at the link.

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'What do you say?' CNN host puts GOP lawmaker on the spot over possible Medicaid cuts

CNN anchor John Berman put Congressman Andy Barr (R-KY) on the spot by using another Republican’s words, questioning the potential House cuts to Medicaid.

“I'm going to get into the details in just a second, but insofar as you understand at this moment what is in this [spending] bill, how would you vote for it or how would you vote?” Berman asked.

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'We got the news moments ago': GOP lawmaker gets real-time fact check on CNN

Rep. Andy Barr (R-KY) got a real-time fact check on president Donald Trump's economy during a live interview on CNN.

The Kentucky Republican appeared Thursday morning on "CNN News Central" to discuss the tax bill Republicans are trying to pass, and host John Berman corrected his assertion on the cost of living.

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'Chill in the air': Staffers 'looking for exit' as Trump guts 'engine' of foreign policy

CNN’s Chief National Security Correspondent Alex Marquardt claims there is a “chill in the air” at the National Security Council as many layoffs are expected.

The comments came after Marquardt gave a report on negotiations to end the Russia-Ukraine war.

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Trump snarls the US is a 'stupid country' ahead of Supreme Court hearing

Hours before the U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments regarding the right to birthright citizenship, which Donald Trump's administration is attempting to undermine, the president jumped on Truth Social to complain.

As NBC News reported, "The longstanding interpretation of the provision as understood by generations of Americans, including legal scholars on the left and right, is that anyone born on U.S. soil is an American citizen with a few minor exceptions, including people who are the children of diplomats. As part of Trump's hard-line immigration policy, he wants to limit birthright citizenship to people who have at least one parent who is a U.S. citizen or is a permanent U.S. resident."

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White House 'privately' relieved Trump avoided 'embarrassing moment' on his trip: CNN

Vladimir Putin won't be attending the Ukraine peace talks that he suggested, and CNN's Jeff Zeleny reported that White House officials are privately relieved.

Neither the Russian president nor U.S. president Donald Trump appear likely to attend peace talks Thursday in Turkey, in which Putin said earlier this week he would personally take part with Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelenskky, and Zeleny reported that the discussions were dramatically scaled back from what had been expected.

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JD Vance plans to attend big event with pope who blasted him on social media

Vice President JD Vance is headed back to Rome this weekend to attend Pope Leo XIV’s inaugural mass, according to a Bloomberg report.

This will be Vance’s second trip to the Vatican in two months. Last month, he visited Pope Francis on Easter weekend before the pontiff died on Easter Monday. Conspiracy theorists and jokesters alike swelled the digital world with the idea that Vance’s meeting killed the pope. However, Francis was hospitalized before his death.

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MSNBC host brought to tears laughing at Trump official's antics before televised hearing

A discussion on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" about Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s appearance before members of Congress on Wednesday was preceded by mention of the secretary of Health and Human Services swimming with his family in a creek notable for overflowing with feces and other forms of sewage.

That, in turn, led co-host Mika Brzezinski to laugh uncontrollably through the beginning of the segment to the point where she was forced to use a tissue to clean up her tears.

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'Whoa!' GOP strategist spirals after her 'influence peddling' analogy falls flat

A clash broke out on CNN after a Republican strategist compared a luxurious gift offered by Qatar's royal family to president Donald Trump to foreign aid provided by the U.S. to other countries.

U.S. attorney general Pam Bondi signed off on the $400 million luxury jet from Qatar, for whom she had previously worked as a lobbyist, but Atlantic staff writer Jerusalem Demsas told "CNN This Morning" on Thursday that the gift looks improper from a number of angles.

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Trump compared to 'toddler' whose 'latest shiny toy' is actually 'very dangerous'

In a dialogue between two New York Times columnists, one raised the alarm that Donald Trump's immaturity has not only made the U.S. a dangerous place, but has impacted how other world leaders have had to adapt to dealing with what is essentially a "toddler" who must constantly be placated.

In the sit-down moderated by Times Opinion senior international editor Krista Mahr, columnists Lydia Polgreen and Nick Kristof were asked to weigh in on what other countries have been faced with during Trump's second term and how it has differed from his previous stint in the Oval Office.

Noting that one upside of Trump has been his reluctance to plunge the U.S. into a war despite all of his saber-rattling, Polgreen noted that the president is easily distracted by lesser endeavors.

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"To me, this is one of the mysteries of Donald Trump because on one level it seems like he’s spending an awful lot of time on things that just don’t seem critical to American interest," she stated. "He cares a lot about the Kennedy Center, he cares a lot about the design of the Rose Garden and things that — given that we’re facing a world on fire — just seem so trivial."

With that in mind, she noted the danger of world leaders being forced to sink to Trump's level.

"It may be risky, but it’s also pretty pathetic that we essentially have world leaders treating the president of the United States like a toddler who needs to be placated with a shiny toy," she explained before noting the $400 million jet that Qatar is dangling in front of the president and adding it is a "really sinister and frankly pathetic about this way of operating in the world."

She continued, "It also becomes the cover for something potentially very dangerous because it means that the government of the United States, rather than thinking about its broad interests and peace and security in the world, is really catering to the venal and frankly childish desires of one very immature man."

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