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Nobel Prize winner warns GOP health plan will hike costs, force millions off insurance

Nobel-winning economist Paul Krugman warns that the GOP’s proposed health care plan would make insurance far less affordable for most Americans. Writing on Substack, Krugman explained that while the plan superficially replaces government subsidies with direct payments, Republicans are unlikely to provide enough support to keep coverage accessible. As a result, millions could drop insurance, leaving a sicker, older pool behind and driving premiums even higher. He also criticized Trump’s recent national address as evidence of poor governance and policy mismanagement.

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'Maggots and mold': Lawsuit alleges even Trump was revolted by state of his golf club

A manager who was fired from President Donald Trump's Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club has filed an explosive lawsuit detailing horrific conditions, reported The Daily Beast on Friday, and noting that even Trump himself was disgusted by the state of the facility.

"The president was dragged into the state of the $350,000-a-year New Jersey club in a lawsuit brought by a fired manager, who claims she was forced out of her job for flagging the dire health violations at the New Jersey club’s clubhouse bistro restaurant," reported Laura Esposito. According to the report, the lawsuit claims the club "had maggots and mold in [Trump's] favorite self-serve ice cream, while it employed drunk kitchen staff and lecherous managers who drunkenly phoned female wait staff to demand they come to their homes late at night."

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Tent where Charlie Kirk was murdered recreated at Turning Point convention — for selfies

Among the attractions at the Turning Point USA (TPUSA) conference being held in Phoenix, Arizona this weekend is an opportunity for attendees to get their picture taken in front of a re-creation of the tent where founder Charlie Kirk was murdered.

The four-day event, called "America Fest" is the first major gathering since Kirk was shot in the neck by an assassin as he took questions at a Utah college.

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'Peacemaker' Trump can't keep his mouth shut — and it's killing his deals: analysis

President Donald Trump has frequently boasted about ending or preventing several wars when listing off the accomplishments of his second term, but according to a new analysis from the Washington Post, his focus on creating "flashy headlines" is causing these deals to fall apart.

The piece, written by Post columnist and veteran foreign correspondent Keith B. Richburg, highlighted a few notable conflicts Trump has claimed to have quelled via ceasefire agreements, including disputes between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as Thailand and Cambodia, and Israel's ongoing war in Gaza.

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Michael Wolff says he can’t serve subpoena to Melania Trump despite multiple attempts

Author and journalist Michael Wolff says he’s been unable to serve a subpoena to First Lady Melania Trump as part of a legal fight stemming from dueling lawsuits between the two. Wolff, who is being sued by Melania Trump for $1 billion over statements about her past, claims process servers have been blocked from delivering papers at both the White House and Trump Tower, with servers refusing to proceed once they realized the target was the first lady. Wolff suggested her extensive security detail has made routine legal service effectively impossible.

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'Start contempt proceeding': Internet erupts over Trump admin stalling Epstein files drop

The internet erupted on Friday after House Oversight Democrats warned of legal action against the Trump administration over trying to cover up the Jeffrey Epstein files.

In a joint statement from Oversight ranking members Robert Garcia (D-CA) and Jamie Raskin (D-MD), the lawmakers said that President Donald Trump's administration and Attorney General Pam Bondi more specifically were violating federal law after attempting to conceal facts and evidence about the deceased child abuser Jeffrey Epstein. The files were slated to be released Friday, which the Department of Justice was legally mandated to do.

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Critics say Trump’s aides are propping him up as support craters

As President Donald Trump’s approval ratings sink deeper in his second term, critics say the White House’s increasingly over-the-top praise signals anxiety about his fading grip on power. On The New Republic’s “Daily Blast” podcast, commentators pointed to press secretary Karoline Leavitt’s glowing — and misleading — claim that the Kennedy Center board unanimously voted to rename the venue after Trump as a revealing example. According to analysts Greg Sargent and Moira Donegan, such exaggerated flattery reflects growing awareness inside Trumpworld that his political standing is eroding, driven by poor polling, electoral setbacks, internal fractures within the GOP, and mounting concerns about his age and public performances.

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Top senator's sudden softness as Trump rough rides over law puzzles conservative

A conservative lawyer is hammering a judicial leader in the Senate for a puzzling softening toward President Donald Trump's rough ride over the law.

Sen. Chuck Grassley's (IW) allies have long touted him as a leader of judicial oversight. But in an Bloomberg article Friday, reporters Tiana Headley and Jonathan Tamari stressed that he is now drawing vehement criticism from those who believe he has grown "tepid" where Trump is concerned.

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Trump 'in a bad place' as Senate prepares to block his big plan: ex-GOP lawmaker

At the same time that government workers were affixing Donald Trump’s name to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, a former House Republican expressed his disgust with the power play and said it will hurt the party.

Appearing with MS NOW host Ana Cabrera, ex-Rep Charlie Dent (R-PA) said the naming change will face an uphill battle because it will require Senate approval for the permanent change and that is not a war Republicans need as the party is struggling.

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Turning Point crowd boos Rob Reiner: 'You raised a kid that slit your throat!'

A crowd at Turning Point USA's AmFest event booed slain Hollywood director Rob Reiner after MAGA influencer Steve Bannon said liberals believed he had a larger impact on culture than Charlie Kirk.

"Just I want to say one thing," Bannon told the AmFest crowd on Friday. "You know, the Rob Reiner — The situation is obviously a tragedy. The president's given you his unique take on things about that situation."

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CNN’s Brianna Keilar corners GOP lawmaker repeating Trump’s Venezuela talking points

CNN anchor Brianna Keilar sharply challenged Rep. Warren Davidson (R-OH) during a tense interview as he echoed President Donald Trump’s framing of U.S. military actions near Venezuela. As Keilar pressed Davidson on whether the administration’s actions amounted to a blockade or risked unauthorized escalation, she repeatedly confronted him with Trump’s own language, forcing the congressman to draw fine distinctions between rhetoric and reality. The exchange highlighted growing unease over the president’s public threats, Congress’ war powers, and whether the administration is seeking legal workarounds to expand military action without explicit congressional approval.

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Insider spills exact time for Trump admin's Epstein files drop

The Justice Department will release files in its possession related to Jeffrey Epstein Friday at 3 p.m., a “source familiar” with the agency’s plans revealed to NewsNation’s Libbey Dean.

The DOJ is compelled by law to release all of its files on Epstein – the wealthy financier who died in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges, and was known for his close ties to powerful and influential figures – after the passage of the Epstein Files Transparency Act last month, which gave the DOJ 30 days to properly redact and release all of its files on Epstein.

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Trump worries about unemployment numbers: 'I wish the Fake News would report it correctly'

President Donald Trump has claimed the United States is the "hottest" country and touted the economy as the greatest it's ever been — but he had a different message on Friday and tried to claim the recent jobs report numbers were inaccurate.

Trump appeared to face the rising unemployment rate and shared a few excuses to justify why he thinks the job market has struggled following the November jobs report that hinted at a weakening labor market.

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