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'A real fracture': GOP insider highlights 'underappreciated' feud in MAGA Republican party

A GOP strategist on Sunday flagged what he says is an "underappreciated fracture" among MAGA Republicans.

Brendan Buck, a former key adviser to ex-House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI), appeared on MSNBC over the weekend, and was asked about a recent "contentious cabinet meeting" involving Donald Trump appointee and richest man in the world Elon Musk.

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'Making us a joke': Elon Musk slammed on his app after insulting Poland foreign minister

The owner of social media network X and the richest man in the world, Elon Musk, was blasted on his own app on Sunday after he was seen insulting a Polish leader.

Musk, who has made waves as Donald Trump's political appointee, has also been featured in news headlines due to his attempts to intervene in foreign politics.

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'Kids as props': J.D. Vance accused of 'using his 3 year old as shield' after new comments

J.D. Vance on Saturday was accused of using his three-year-old daughter as a human shield.

Vance over the weekend told a story about what he said was an incident during which he and his family were harassed by protesters.

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'My daughter grew increasingly scared': J.D. Vance describes incident with protesters

U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance over the weekend vented on social media about a purported incident involving Ukraine protesters and his daughter.

Vance on Saturday took to X to complain about a political protest that he says scared his toddler. Vance has been in the news after he got aggressive with Ukraine's leader during an Oval Office meeting, which led some to suggest Vance has sided with Russia.

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'Could be a backdoor': Elon Musk's team reportedly given access to 'sensitive income data'

Elon Musk's so-called DOGE group has been granted access to sensitive income data from the Department of Health and Human Services, according to a new report on Saturday.

Musk, the richest man in the world and Donald Trump's right hand man, now has access to "a sensitive child support database with troves of income data," according to the Washington Post, which says the decision overrode the objections of career employees.

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‘I miss lynch mobs’: The secretary of retribution's followers are getting impatient

A recent X post by Ivan Raiklin, a retired Army lieutenant general who bills calls the “secretary of retribution,” prompted a flurry of comments endorsing violence and vigilantism directed at four mayors who testified before Congress on Wednesday.

Raiklin, who last year circulated a so-called “Deep State Target List” against President Trump’s enemies while calling for “livestreamed swatting raids,” re-posted a video of Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.), a member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, delivering a fiery lecture to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, Denver Mayor Mike Johnston and New York City Mayor Eric Adams, all Democrats.

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'Greatness': Trump adds MAGA Fox News hosts to round out Kennedy Center takeover

President Donald Trump has named two Fox News hosts — both of whom have promoted right-wing conspiracies — to join the board of the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts.

Trump wrested control of the Kennedy Center on the banks of the Potomac River, resulting in spiraling ticket sales and artists canceling performances in protest. After returning to the Oval Office, the president ousted the art institution’s leadership and packed the board of trustees with loyalists before designating his proxy, Richard Grenell, to run the operation.

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Gene Hackman: Causes of death finally revealed for Oscar-winning actor and wife

New details have emerged in the mysterious deaths of acclaimed actor Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa after the couple was found dead at their Santa Fe, New Mexico home, Feb. 26.

Hackman died of cardiovascular disease, with Alzheimer’s disease “a significant contributory factor,” according to Heather Jarrell, the chief medical investigator for the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator. She told reporters at a news conference on Friday that the 95-year-old Oscar-winning actor likely died Feb. 18, about a week after his wife.

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'My life is disintegrating': Fired fed workers finding no sympathy from MAGA relatives

Having suffered the indignity of being capriciously fired by young staffers employed by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), some former federal workers are dealing with unsympathetic relatives who support Donald Trump's government employee purge.

According to a report in the Boston Herald, fired civil servants are busy applying for unemployment checks and using the medical benefits still available to them to load up on medications while at the same time getting tepid support on the home front.

As the report notes, "Expecting sympathy, some axed workers are finding family and friends who instead are steadfast in their support of what they see as a bloated government’s waste."

ALSO READ: Elon Musk's DOGE boys think this is a video game as Trump plots his 2nd coup

24-year-old Luke Tobin, who was axed from his job working for the U.S. Forest Service in Idaho confessed, "I’ve been treated as a public enemy by the government and now it’s bleeding into my own family."

During his interview, Tobin added some relatives believe his dismissal is what needs to happen "to make the government great again” before adding, "They can’t separate their ideology and their politics from supporting their own family and their own loved ones.”

Kristin Jenn, who was on the verge of starting her job with the Forest Service, claimed she has faced the same lack of sympathy.

"My life is disintegrating because I can’t work in my chosen field,” the 47-year-old living in Austin explained. “Lump on top of that no support from family – it hits you very hard.”

Jenn noted that her mother, a federal employee herself, still supports Trump.

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'Bobblehead' Rubio is 'setting a land speed record for making himself irrelevant': analyst

Former Sen. Marco Rubio's brief tenure as secretary of state was panned on MSNBC on Friday morning by the New York Times' expert on foreign trade and affairs who labeled the Florida Republican as nothing more than a yes-man for Donald Trump.

Pointing to Trump's on-again, off-again tariff battle with key U.S. allies in a global economy along with his shunting Rubio off to the side as he and Vice President J.D. Vance battled with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky, the Times' Tom Friedman noted Rubio went from a position of power in the U.S. Senate to a "bobblehead."

" Trump one was surrounded by buffers, responsible, intelligent adults, so when he came back from a night at the Mar-a-Lago restaurant or bar with some crazy idea, those buffers would contain it," Friedman told the "Morning Joe" hosts. "This Trump two is built around amplifiers. He comes back with some crazy a-- idea from the last person he talked to and these guys amplify it."

ALSO READ: 'Gotta be kidding': Jim Jordan scrambles as he's confronted over Musk 'double standard'

"There's Marco Rubio though," he elaborated. "Marco Rubio is setting a land speed record for making himself irrelevant as secretary of state; He's basically secretary of state to Panama, okay?"

"And one reason is because Trump comes up with some crazy idea in Gaza or whatever that he's not briefed on, and Marco Rubio just amplifies it," the columnist accused. "Scott Bessent, the Treasury secretary, just amplifies it."

"Previously, buffers contained it and that's what scares me most for the long run," he added. "He's surrounded by amplifiers now, ––bobbleheads and not buffers."

You can watch below or at the link right here.

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'Can't believe someone found this': Experts amazed by legal tool White House turned up

The White House is trying to tamp down a wave of lawsuits over its actions by invoking a rarely used rule that has shocked legal experts.

CNN's Katelyn Polantz reported that the White House circulated a memo to agency heads Thursday attacking the lawsuits as partisan impediments to president Donald Trump's agenda and encouraged them to invoke a procedural rule requiring plaintiffs to post money at the start of their court case to cover costs and damages if the government ultimately prevails.

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'The Hard Reset': Here's how the U.S. is exporting terrorism around the world

A U.S. leader of the neo-Nazi accelerationist network known as the Terrorgram Collective directly communicated with a 16-year-old who killed four people in a school shooting spree that took place in Brazil in 2022.

The link was disclosed for the first time in a filing last month by federal prosecutors opposing bail review for Matthew Robert Allison, one of two Terrorgram leaders who are charged with soliciting the murder of federal officials and conspiracy to provide material support for terrorists, among other alleged offenses.

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'Single greatest threat': Top Senate Republican slams MAGA consultant in profane interview

A top Senate Republican lashed out at a conservative political consultant with close ties to President Donald Trump who said the GOP needs to dump him and find a new candidate — or else "hand the gavel" back to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.

Arthur Schwartz took to X on Thursday morning to urge Republicans to dump Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC), citing polling showing former Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper leading Tillis in the 2026 race for Senate.

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