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Trump misses 'one thing that could save the GOP' as he scrambles to impress base: analyst

President Donald Trump may be hobbling his own party's chances of maintaining congressional majorities by ignoring a crucial issue for voters.

The 79-year-old president demonstrated his political strength last week in Indiana’s closely watched Republican primary, where seven challengers he endorsed defeated incumbent state senators who resisted his gerrymandering demands,. But MS NOW's Zeeshan Aleem argued that only shows his continued hold on the MAGA base.

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Trump convenes war cabinet as insiders drop ominous hint about what comes next

President Donald Trump is meeting Monday with his top national security officials for a closed-door discussion on potential next steps in the U.S. war against Iran, three U.S. officials revealed that same afternoon, with two officials divulging details on what option Trump was “leaning toward.”

The United States and Iran have been in a ceasefire since early April, albeit one the president called "unbelievably weak” on Monday as the two nations continue to exchange attacks on one another. Last week, the Trump administration sent Tehran a draft proposal for ending the conflict – a proposal that wasn’t responded to until Sunday, where it was immediately rejected by Trump, who admittedly hadn’t read it in full.

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Senate Republican accused of trying to 'cover his tracks' as he falls behind in polls

Republican Sen. Dan Sullivan of Alaska is frantically attempting to undo damage from his party-line votes gutting provisions of the Affordable Care Act — voting twice with Senate Democrats on health provisions in what political analysts characterize as too little, too late damage control as he falls behind in his re-election bid.

According to reporting from The Hill, Sullivan voted for an amendment sponsored by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), opposing any funding bill that failed to lower out-of-pocket healthcare costs. He also voted for another amendment sponsored by Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) addressing insurers delaying or denying care.

However, Alaska political analyst John-Henry Heckendorn suggested the strategic pivot is unlikely to repair the political damage from Sullivan's consistent party-line voting on healthcare issues.

"Given how many times he has voted for legislation or amendments that would either reduce healthcare subsidies for Alaskans or otherwise increase healthcare costs, the damage has largely been done," Heckendorn told The Hill's Joseph Choi.

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Trump admin unable to explain 'serious injury' threat as reflecting pool costs explode

The cost to renovate the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool has skyrocketed to $13.1 million, ballooning more than sevenfold from Donald Trump's initial $1.8 million estimate — with little public explanation for why the price tag exploded for a no-bid contract awarded to a Trump administration-handpicked contractor.

According to reporting from The New York Times, Virginia-based Atlantic Industrial Coatings received the lucrative no-bid contract for the project. The Trump administration bypassed the requirement to seek competing bids by claiming the situation was so urgent that any delay would cause "serious injury" to the government — though the administration has continued to refuse to explain what that injury would entail.

Instead, the administration cited Trump's desire to complete the work before the nation's 250th birthday on July 4.

Public contracting records, examined by the Times' David A. Fahrenthold and Luke Broadwater, do not explain why the cost increased so dramatically. Katie Martin, a spokeswoman for the Interior Department, claimed the higher price "reflects the effort necessary to expedite the timeline of completing the leak prevention coating project — more people, more materials, more equipment and longer hours ahead of our 250th."

However, government documents obtained by The New York Times reveal that the contract's current $13.1 million value matches, down to the dollar, an offer submitted by Atlantic Industrial Coatings in mid-May. That offer included a 20 percent profit margin for the contractor.

On Monday, the Cultural Landscape Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to landscape architecture, filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court seeking to halt the paint job. The foundation argues that the Trump administration ignored a federal law requiring advance scrutiny of projects that alter historic landmarks.

The ballooning contract cost and lack of competitive bidding raise questions about whether taxpayer money is being steered to politically connected contractors under the guise of emergency expedited timelines, the Times is reporting.

RFK Jr. gushes praise on Trump for working to increase young men's 'sperm count'

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. expressed gratitude for President Donald Trump's alleged efforts to increase the sperm count of young men.

During an event on Monday to introduce the moms.gov maternal health website, Kennedy pointed to a "fertility crisis in this country right now."

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Trump makes stunning admission on key proposal he rejected

The Trump administration sent Tehran its proposal last week to end the U.S. war against Iran, and days later on Sunday, finally received a response – one that President Donald Trump rejected out of hand, and on Monday, made the startling admission that he hadn’t read it in its entirety.

Taking questions from reporters in the Oval Office Monday, Trump was asked about the state of the ongoing ceasefire between the United States and Iran, one that began in early April but has seen continued hostilities between the two nations.

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'That's disgusting': Mockery as Trump drops 'loyal to me' veiled threat on live TV

President Donald Trump's comments directed at a Republican lawmaker raised eyebrows on Monday when he suggested that she needs to remain loyal to him to stay in his good graces.

Trump was with a group of female congressional leaders and cabinet members at the Oval Office to announce the new website to help support maternal health for Americans, moms.gov, when he dropped the veiled threat towards Sen. Katie Britt (R-AL).

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Trump’s ‘game of chicken’ poised to hand adversary what it's sought for decades: analysis

Despite spending nearly $1 trillion on its military in 2025, the United States has failed to achieve its stated objectives in the war against Iran, which spent just $7.4 billion on defense last year – roughly 130 times less than Washington – and CNN host Fareed Zakaria offered a novel theory on Monday for why that may be the case.

“President Donald Trump decided to play a game of ‘chicken’ with Iran – think of two drivers racing straight at each other. In these situations, if the stakes for one side are existential and for the other much lower, the side with the higher stakes usually prevails,” Zakaria wrote in an op-ed published recently in The Washington Post.

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Trump scolds Dz. Oz for not naming new maternity program after him: 'Put me in there'

President Donald Trump complained that his name was not used to promote moms.gov, a new government website focusing on maternal health.

Trump announced the new website at a White House event on Monday.

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GOP hands 'major campaign gift' to Dems as midterms near: analyst

Republicans have handed Democrats a "major campaign gift" ahead of the midterm elections, a columnist said on Monday.

The Guardian's Sidney Blumenthal, former senior adviser to President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, discussed how GOP lawmakers "would rather self-destruct than attempt to rescue themselves." And in doing so, Democrats have made gains with voters that could pay off in the fall.

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Stephen Miller's influence in eclipse as Trump ducks him to avoid getting an 'earful'

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller's grip on Trump administration policy is reportedly slipping as the president keeps his most ideologically rigid advisor at arm's length — a shift that coincides with a dramatic pullback in aggressive ICE enforcement and the sidelining of Miller by new DHS leadership.

According to reporting from The Atlantic, Miller's "waning influence" is no coincidence. The controversial activities of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement have fallen from the front pages as the agency retrenches following the firing of DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and Miller's marginalization within the administration's immigration policy apparatus.

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Panic ensues as ‘largest energy crisis in modern history’ appears imminent

Energy expert and investor Eric Nuttall predicted in early May that the world was heading toward what may be the “largest energy crisis in modern history,” one that could spark oil rationing “within weeks” – and with the two-week mark now fast approaching, observers across the political spectrum began expressing alarm on Monday.

“We’re not talking months or quarters. In the next couple of weeks, you will have to rationalize demand by more than during COVID,” Nuttall told Bloomberg on May 1. “This is by far the biggest energy crisis that anybody alive is experiencing. There remains a lot of apathy in the market, because I just don’t think people can wrap their heads around it.”

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'Who's going to provide?' MAGA TV uses segment on strong women to hype male 'protectors'

The pro-MAGA Real America's Voice network celebrated women for Mother's Day by calling for male "providers" and "protectors."

During a Monday segment about Mother's Day, host Gina Loudon spoke to Kimberly Fletcher, CEO of Moms for America, a conservative organization.

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