SmartNews

GOP senator slams disabled Medicaid recipients on COVID 'sugar high'

Sen. Roger Marshall (R-KS) lashed out at disabled protesters who interrupted a House hearing on Medicaid by claiming they were hired and on a "sugar high" from COVID-era spending.

Marshall made the remarks Wednesday to Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo, a day after the disabled Medicaid recipients interrupted a House Energy and Commerce hearing on health care.

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AOC rails against GOP lawmaker's 'terribly disrespectful comment' at late-night hearing

New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez railed against her Republican colleagues for making a “terribly disrespectful comment” in a late-night Medicaid debate, according to a report from Politico.

The incident happened around 3am Wednesday as the House Energy and Commerce panel began marking up their portion of President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill.”

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'It'll be an ugly one': GOP frantic over looming 'trainwreck' that will fracture the party

Republicans are looking at a battle in Texas for a U.S. Senate seat as a looming trainwreck in the upcoming midterm election that, at the moment, looks to be unavoidable.

A decision by scandal-plagued Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) to challenge longtime Sen. John Cornyn (R) has set off a panic that millions of dollars will be wasted on a primary fight for a seat that, under normal circumstances, would be a GOP lock in the conservative state, but may be put in play after a potentially bruising battle for the nomination.

According to Politico's Ben Jacobs, the war for the nomination will boil down to a "GOP trainwreck of the 2026 election cycle, a cash-burning demolition derby that threatens to fracture the party, force the White House to intervene."

EXCLUSIVE: Breastfeeding mom of US citizen sues Kristi Noem after being grabbed by ICE

“I hate to see that kind of internecine warfare in my party,” explained Rep. Mike McCaul (R-TX) who predicted, "It’ll be an ugly one.”

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'It gave Susie a key window': Insiders reveal why Trump finally 'blinked' on China tariffs

President Donald Trump's top aides spent weeks working behind the scenes to persuade him to back down on China tariffs that had rattled global markets before they finally spotted an opening.

White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and other aides told the president that the blue-collar workers that he considered to be his political base would be hurt if the tariffs weren't lowered, according to two source familiar with the matter who spoke to the Washington Post.

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'Marathon overnight': Onlookers say late-night House hearing ends in 'gift to the wealthy'

More than 17 hours after the hearing started, the House Ways and Means Committee advanced their portion of President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill.”

On X and Bluesky, reporters and congressional aides were grateful their all-nighter came to an end.

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Trump's wheeling and dealing is handcuffing the Fed from bailing him out: report

Trump’s trade deals won’t be helping the Federal Reserve roll back interest rates anytime soon, according to Bloomberg columnist Bill Dudley.

He questioned the “optimism” people are having as the tariffs roll back in the U.S.-China trade war. “I’m not seeing the ‘breakthrough.’”

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New legal ruling 'not really the greatest news for the Trump administration': MSNBC host

A ruling by a federal judge on Tuesday that will allow Donald Trump's administration to use the antiquated the Alien Enemies Act to deport immigrants is not the win some fans of the president think it is.

That is the opinion of MSNBC host Joe Scarborough who labeled the ruling less than meets the eye.

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'I wouldn't trust it': Trump-defending political strategist condemns president's idea

One of president Donald Trump's consistent defenders on CNN spoke out against him accepting Qatar's gift of a luxury jet.

The $400 million "flying palace" raises constitutional, legal and ethical concerns, and political strategist Shermichael Singleton told "CNN News Central" on Wednesday that the Qatari royal family's gift represents a national security threat.

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Presidential ethics attorneys flag 'even worse' Trump violation than Qatar plane

President Donald Trump is showing a “flagrant disregard of the Constitution” in the most “brazen of ways,” according to three former ethics attorneys in a New York Times guest essay.

Norman Eisen, Virginia Canter, and Richard W. Painter, served as ethics counsels in the Clinton, George W. Bush, and Obama White Houses.

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MSNBC host bursts out laughing after supercut of GOP senators bursting Trump's bubble

MSNBC painted a portrait of Republican party disarray on Wednesday morning by compiling a super-cut of high-profile GOP senators pouring cold water on Donald Trump's desire to claim a $400 million jet being gifted to him from the leaders of Qatar.

While the president has repeatedly declared, "Why should our military, and therefore our taxpayers, be forced to pay hundreds of millions of Dollars when they can get it for FREE from a country that wants to reward us for a job well done," that is not universally endorsed by his caucus.

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Controversial Trump deal 'not going to go through' due to ethics concerns: ex-GOP lawmaker

A former Republican congressman doesn't think president Donald Trump will be allowed to keep the "flying palace" given to him by Qatar's royal family.

The Trump administration is preparing to accept a super luxury Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet from the foreign government to use as Air Force One and then be transferred to his presidential library, but the lavish, $400 million gift has raised ethical concerns and drawn strong bipartisan criticism.

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'Pardon the snark': Legal expert hurls 'long list of criticisms' at Justice John Roberts

U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts recently made some comments that many interpreted as a criticism of Donald Trump, but he's still not doing enough to protect the judiciary from MAGA, a former federal prosecutor has said.

Ex-prosecutor Joyce Vance had some harsh words for Roberts, who she thinks is doing a good job speaking up for judges but not on defending democracy itself from the president.

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Trump officials pen NYT op-ed defending loss of welfare benefits as an 'opportunity'

On Wednesday morning, the New York Times handed over space on the editorial page to allow members of Donald Trump's cabinet to pitch the idea that being booted off welfare is the "opportunity" of a lifetime.

Under a headline that bluntly stated, "Trump Leadership: If You Want Welfare and Can Work, You Must," Trump inner circle members Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Dr. Mehmet Oz, Brooke Rollins and Scott Turner insisted there are too many "able-bodied" Americans who are receiving government assistance.

As they put it, the plans to force Americans off the rolls should be contained in, as they called it, "The One, Big, Beautiful Bill."

EXCLUSIVE: Breastfeeding mom of US citizen sues Kristi Noem after being grabbed by ICE

"Too many able-bodied adults on welfare are not working at all. And too often we don’t even ask them to. For many, welfare is no longer a lifeline to self-sufficiency but a lifelong trap of dependency," they wrote before adding, "Our agencies are united in a very straightforward policy approach: able-bodied adults receiving benefits must work, participate in job training or volunteer in their communities at least 20 hours a week."

Maintaining they believe, "welfare dependency, not work" is a "barrier," the appointed cabinet secretaries added, "There are millions of open jobs around the country, with more on the way as President Trump’s job-creation policies are fully implemented," while insisting, "This is about opportunity. We believe that work is transformative for the individual who moves from welfare to employment."

They then served notice, "At the Departments of Agriculture, Health and Human Services and Housing and Urban Development, we are ready to implement work requirements," if Donald Trump gets what he wants out of Congress.

You can read more here.