SmartNews

'It’s Political Science 101': Republicans put an 'expiration date' on Trump economic pain

Republican insiders throughout the country are giving Donald Trump the benefit of the doubt that the economic pain Americans are experiencing due to his trade war will be short-lived and won't cripple them at the ballot box in the 2026 midterm election.

But they have their limits.

According to a report from Politico's Liz Crampton, GOP lawmakers and campaign consultants are standing firm behind the president and his on-again, off-again tariff proposals for the moment but are acknowledging things could go south quickly if lower prices and jobs don't return.

As Crampton wrote, "Some Republicans are putting an expiration date on how long they’ll tolerate the economic fallout from Donald Trump’s trade war," adding, "Interviews with nearly three dozen Republican leaders and operatives in seven battlegrounds — from party chairs to strategists to state lawmakers — reveal a growing acknowledgment that economic shocks could hamper the party’s prospects in the midterms."

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Revealed: Far-right pressuring Johnson to join Trump in new attack

WASHINGTON — Dismantling the federal government won’t be complete without upending the judicial branch — or so many conservatives argue, which is why rank-and-file Republicans are pressuring party leaders to fall in line and join White House efforts to purge the nation’s judiciary.

Before Congress left town for its two-week Easter recess, Speaker Mike Johnson tried to placate his right flank by ushering a bill restricting national injunctions through the House. Party leaders have also promised hearings.

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'I can't recover like I used to': Trump FBI appointee tries to get ahead of NYT 'exposé'

A Donald Trump FBI appointee is trying to get out in front of a New York Times "exposé" about him.

Dan Bongino, who walked away from his lucrative job as a far-right podcaster and apologist for the president to accept the job of deputy FBI director, has recently come under fire from MAGA and has been forced to defend himself from his own allies.

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'Problem for Trump people': GOP insider flags big issue for President's legal case

Donald Trump's White House keeps pumping out information seeking to discredit a wrongly deported man, and that's exactly the conversation they want to be having, a GOP strategist said Saturday.

Speaking on MSNBC's PoliticsNation this weekend, Republican strategist Susan del Percio, who has a history of working with Republican candidates and in Rudy Giuliani's administration, was asked about the case involving a Maryland man, Kilmar Ábrego García, who was purportedly sent to El Salvador in error.

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'Supreme Court has an inkling': Ex-prosecutor says top justices know Trump's big plan

The Supreme Court is clued in to Donald Trump's plan to undercut their power, an ex-prosecutor said on Saturday.

Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance over the weekend posted an essay explaining the various deportation cases in which Trump's administration is involved. As part of that explainer, Vance sounded the alarm about what she sees as Trump's agenda.

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'Get a grip': Conservative ignites fury on all sides over 'dissolve Supreme Court' comment

A conservative talk show host drew fire from all sides after suggesting Donald Trump and his administration should simply "ignore the Supreme Court" and potentially even "dissolve" it.

Jesse Kelly, who in 2021 openly speculated that Republicans may soon get tired of "following the rules" and "pick a fascist" to lead the party, has also been criticized for his prior social media comments.

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'Could get ugly': Fox reporter spills 'breaking' news on Trump 'risking financial crisis'

A veteran Donald Trump reporter says the president is willing to risk financial crisis in order to enact his biggest agenda items.

FOX Biz senior correspondent Charles Gasparino, who reports on Trump often and earned the ire of MAGA when he recently reported that conservatives were wrong to suggest Trump outsmarted the world with tariffs, took to social media to issue a breaking alert.

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'Revealing': Analyst says J.D. Vance's new 'admission' will 'undermine' Trump's legal case

The Vice President might have made things more difficult for Donald Trump's administration in a major legal case.

J.D. Vance's social media activity may be complicating the President's arguments in the case involving a Maryland man, Kilmar Ábrego García, who was purportedly sent to El Salvador in error. That's according to the New Republic's Greg Sargent's new analysis.

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'Hey, John Roberts?' Chief Justice alerted as White House liaison insults his intelligence

A key White House official is insulting Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts, Jr., and the nation's top jurist should know, a legal expert said on Saturday.

It all started with the Supreme Court over the weekend temporarily halted the Trump administration's deportation of alleged Venezuelan gang members under an 18th-century law.

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Elon Musk suffers 'setbacks' while 'unnerving even some veteran Trump officials': NYT

The richest man in the world has suffered a "series of setbacks" while embracing a fringe MAGA figure whose growing influence has "unnerved even some veteran" members of Donald Trump's administration, a new report states.

Elon Musk enjoyed a smooth early ride in Trump's second administration, but lately is hitting bumps in the road, according to the New York Times.

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'Basically never happens': Legal expert singles out Alito slight in overnight Trump ruling

In a series of posts on BlueSky, Slate legal analyst Mark Joseph Stern suggested the majority of justices on the Supreme Court appear to be angry with Donald Trump's administration's attempt to swiftly deport more immigrants in Texas while there are still questions about its legality.

Noting that seven of the nine justices on the conservative-majority court stepped in to stop the Alien Enemies Act rendition flight with an order issued at 1:30 AM, Stern pointed out that Justices Sam Alito and Clarence Thomas dissented but were not given time to publish their reasoning.

As he wrote on BlueSky, "Obviously, a huge victory for the migrants here and a major defeat for Trump’s lawless effort to rush out a rendition flight before the courts could act. But also—potentially a massive signal from the Supreme Court that it is finally prepared to go toe to toe with Trump to halt AEA deportations."

ALSO READ: 'We know where this leads': How Trump’s crackdown puts Jewish people in peril

Having written that, he elaborated, "I think the majority that lifted Boasberg’s restraining order truly believed Trump would heed its warning about due process and pause further AEA renditions until SCOTUS ruled on their legality. Instead Trump tried to sneak out migrants before courts could act. And now I think SCOTUS is pissed."

In particular, he noted Alito would be publishing his dissent at a later time after that the rest of the court, led by Chief Justice John Roberts, rushed out their ruling without waiting for him.

"It is SO unusual for the Supreme Court to issue an order this late at night and honestly incredible only Thomas and Alito noted their dissents," he wrote before adding, "Also fascinating that SCOTUS rushed out the order before Alito could finish writing his dissent. That basically never happens! Again—majority seems pissed."

You can see his posts here.

'Okay, this isn't real': Dem lawmaker stunned by 'childish' Trump social media post

During an appearance on MSNBC, Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) expressed surprise and dismay that someone in Donald Trump's White House posted a meme screenshot that made fun of Kilmer Abrego Garcia and his incarceration in El Salvador.

Speaking with host Katie Phang, Crockett was asked about the screenshot of a New York Times headline that has been altered to say Abrego Garcia is "never coming back," from the maximum security prison where he has been held.

After Phang had her producers show the post, Crockett pounced. on the post on the official White House account.

ALSO READ:'We’ve made a mistake': Trump’s trade war sends GOP into frenzy

"One of my colleagues actually put this post up in a group chat and I was like, 'Okay, this isn't real, right?'" she told the host. "Because it was just a picture. and then she was like, 'No, it's absolutely real.' and I was like, 'who are we and where are we living? And who is running this country?'"

"Because the level of childishness that we saw in this post, but also just the level of cruelty and the level of admission that we've seen, right?" she added, "Like Katie, you and I both know that ultimately, this is not the last that we have seen of this post. This post will most likely show up in some court filing when they are trying to determine whether or not this court has –– or I'm sorry –– this administration has intentionally decided that it wanted to ignore a court order."

She then added, "This will most likely show up in a contempt hearing, so I don't know why, I don't know who's advising or I don't know if they really do care."

You can watch below or at the link.

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Trump poised to be 'called on the carpet' as 'outrageous' excuses fail: ex-prosecutor

According to former U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade, the courts are beginning to lose patience with Donald Trump and members of his administration and a reckoning is coming.

During an appearance on MSNBC with host Ali Velshi, McQuade was asked about the legal setbacks Trump's DOJ has suffered this past week which included a late-night ruling from the Supreme Court halting shipping more immigrants out of the U.S.

As she quipped to the host, "If they're dancing, Ali, they're dancing with two left feet."

ALSO READ: 'Retribution or bust’: 'Secretary of Retribution' joins J6 leaders to demand mass arrests

"The most outrageous argument I think they made in the past week was arguing that when the court ordered that the government facilitate his [Kilmar Abrego Garcia's] release from custody in an El Salvador prison all that mean was if he should somehow find his way to the border of the United States, the United States should let. him in, There is no way that that's what the court meant when it said 'facilitate' his release from custody in El Salvador," she pointed out.

"This is a complete denial of the constitutional right to due process and so you're right, so far they seem to be, you know, using every excuse other than my dog ate it," she added. "But at some point they're going to get called on the carpet and the question will be whether they say they get to do it anyway."

You can watch below or at the link.

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