Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Trump News

Journalist goes scorched earth on pro-Trump pastor: ‘Unholy essence of religious right’

South Carolina Pastor Mark Burns spent part of his weekend defending his involvement in the dedication of a 22-foot-tall, $400,000 gold-plated statue depicting President Donald Trump with a raised fist, and on Monday, journalist Prem Thakker issued him a particularly scathing rebuke over what he called the “hypocrisy of the religious right.”

The statue was erected at the Trump National Doral Golf Club in Doral, Florida, with Burns heading a dedication ceremony last Wednesday.

Keep reading... Show less

James Comer fears wading into minefield with key Epstein witness: report

The House Oversight Committee is grappling with a fraught dilemma as it prepares to question Sarah Kellen, a key associate of late financier Jeffrey Epstein, about her role in his crimes — with committee members sharply divided over whether she was a victim of his abuse or an active co-conspirator who should face prosecution.

According to reporting from Politico, there is agreement among committee members, led by Rep. James Comer (R-KY), that Kellen should testify on May 21. However, the committee is deeply divided over how aggressively to question her.

Kellen was one of four women named as possible co-conspirators in the controversial 2007 agreement with Florida federal prosecutors that granted all of them immunity while allowing Epstein to serve minimal jail time instead of facing federal sex-trafficking charges.

Keep reading... Show less

GOP split widens as some Republicans join Dems in rejecting key Trump plan: MS NOW

Senate Republicans have included $1 billion in funding for White House security upgrades related to President Donald Trump's East Wing renovation project in a $70 billion immigration enforcement bill, triggering sharp criticism from Democrats – and resistance from some GOP lawmakers.

The provision, tucked into the reconciliation package by Republicans on the Judiciary Committee, explicitly restricts funds to "security adjustments and upgrades" and prohibits spending on non-security ballroom elements, but the Trump administration has embraced the measure as tacit approval of the president's ballroom project, which Democrats argue amounts to federal funding of the construction, reported MS NOW.

Keep reading... Show less

'Venus fly trap': WSJ's chilling warning about what Xi has planned for Trump in Beijing

The Wall Street Journal's editorial board is sounding the alarm ahead of President Donald Trump's summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on Thursday, warning that Xi set a "Venus fly trap" for Trump on Taiwan that could upend decades of U.S. foreign policy.

The board warned that Xi wants Trump to formally "oppose" Taiwanese independence, a subtle but seismic shift from the current U.S. posture of "not supporting" it. While the change might sound like diplomatic hairsplitting, the Journal warned it would have massive ramifications.

Keep reading... Show less

This 'secret weapon' lets Trump and Epstein elite 'get away with anything': author

Author and journalist Anand Giridharadas identified Sunday what he called the single thing that has allowed the wealthy and powerful figures in Jeffrey Epstein's orbit to escape accountability for decades — and it's something most Americans have lost.

Speaking on The Daily Beast podcast with host Joanna Coles, Giridharadas argued the so-called "Epstein class" — a shadowy network of billionaires, financiers, professors, royals, and political operators — operates by a code of mutual protection that overrides any ideological divide.

Keep reading... Show less

Churchgoers agonize to WSJ over whether Trump deserves absolution

A Virginia church group's Sunday discussion turned into a raw debate over whether President Donald Trump deserves forgiveness — with one parishioner flatly declaring it isn't his job to grant it.

About a dozen members of Annandale United Methodist Church gathered in a chapel beside the sanctuary to wrestle with faith, the U.S. war in Iran, and Trump's recent feud with Pope Leo XIV, the Wall Street Journal reported Sunday. The conversation came in the wake of Trump's AI-generated image appearing to depict himself as a Christ-like figure, which the president later deleted.

Keep reading... Show less

Livid Trump threatens to upend Supreme Court after tariff humiliation

President Donald Trump lashed out at two of his own Supreme Court picks in a rambling Truth Social post this week, suggesting he should pack the nation's highest court after Justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett joined the 6-3 majority that struck down his sweeping tariff agenda as unconstitutional.

"I 'Love' Justice Neil Gorsuch! He’s a really smart and good man, but he voted against me, and our Country, on Tariffs, a devastating move. How do I reconcile this? So bad, and hurtful to our Country ," Trump wrote, before turning his ire on Barrett with equal frustration. "I have, likewise, always liked and respected Amy Coney Barrett, but the same thing with her. They were appointed by me, and yet have hurt our Country so badly!"

Keep reading... Show less

Trump lets fury fly at Fox News as feud escalates with wild claim about MAGA

President Donald Trump launched a second furious rant against Fox News on Sunday afternoon, hours after a first explosive Truth Social post attacking Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) for an interview the California Democrat gave on the network earlier in the day.

In an evening post, Trump broadened his target beyond Khanna to include comedian Bill Maher, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), and the network itself — claiming that "MAGA Republicans, who are actually close to 100% of the Party, hate Fox."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump accused of handing massive gift to tobacco donors who couldn't win it legally

A former top Food and Drug Administration tobacco regulator who served under both Democratic and Republican administrations unloaded on the Trump administration's stunning new policy opening the door to flavored e-cigarettes.

In guidance issued Friday, as President Donald Trump reportedly signed off on a plan to fire FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, the agency said it would stop enforcing rules against illicit vapes and allow products already in advanced stages of review onto the market, according to The New York Times.

Keep reading... Show less

Frothing Trump sent over the edge by Dem's Fox News appearance

President Donald Trump exploded on Truth Social on Sunday after Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) appeared on Fox News to discuss redistricting, the Iran war and competition with China, with Trump calling the congressman a "sleazebag" and accusing him of trying to steal credit for the steel industry's revival.

The apparent trigger was Khanna's comments about Chinese steel, where the California Democrat told Fox News anchor Jacqui Heinrich that he was "horrified" to see Chinese steel at the Port of Cleveland and called for protecting American steel manufacturing.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump doesn't like what he sees after reading Iran's peace proposal

President Donald Trump declared Iran's latest peace proposal "totally unacceptable" in a blistering Truth Social post on Sunday, signaling that negotiations to end the Iran war remain deeply deadlocked.

"I have just read the response from Iran's so-called 'Representatives,'" Trump wrote. "I don't like it — TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!"

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's 'Buy American' tirade collides with major inconvenient detail

President Donald Trump took to Truth Social on Sunday to demand federal agencies stop buying foreign-made products and rail against bureaucrats handing out waivers — but his all-caps tirade glossed over the awkward reality that American manufacturing has actually shed tens of thousands of jobs since he returned to office.

"ALL FEDERAL AGENCIES MUST BUY AMERICAN — NO EXCUSES!" Trump wrote in a vintage all-caps post, accusing Washington politicians of having spent "decades" sending taxpayer dollars overseas and allowing foreign countries to "rip us off" while American workers and factories were left behind.

Keep reading... Show less

Critics zero in on what's really behind Trump's sudden meltdown

President Donald Trump lashed out at Iran on Sunday with a menacing remark amid Washington and Tehran’s ongoing, back-and-forth peace negotiations, and critics believe they’ve identified a potential reason for the president’s latest outburst.

The United States and Iran agreed to a ceasefire last month that remains ongoing, despite both sides having lobbed attacks on each other within the past week. While peace talks between the two nations have largely stalled, the Trump administration sent Tehran a proposal to end the war last week, with Trump telling the press that he expected a response by Friday night.

Keep reading... Show less