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'What kind of idiots work for this moron': Critics stunned by Putin/Trump security breach

Reacting to a report that someone in Donald Trump’s entourage who went with him to Alaska left sensitive State Department documents on a public hotel printer, critics of the president pounced on yet another security breach since he took office.


According to a report from NPR on Saturday, Three guests staying at the Hotel Captain Cook, located 20 minutes away from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson where the Russian and American president were meeting, discovered the documents that included names, meeting times, room locations, phone numbers and other details.

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'He realizes the power he has': Trump insiders spill about 'risks' he's taking

A White House insider said that President Donald Trump’s federal takeover of Washington, D.C. could very well “end up permanent,” according to reporting Saturday from CNN.

“I could see where federalizing the police ends up permanent,” said a person described as someone “close to the White House,” speaking with CNN. “There’s plenty more than can be done.”

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'Exhausted' Trump 'seemed defeated' after brief encounter with Putin: columnist

Instead of coming away with progress being made toward a ceasefire in Ukraine, Donald Trump flew home from Alaska looking every bit his age after getting “played” by Vladimir Putin.

In his column for the Daily Beast, commentator David Rothkopf suggested that not only did the president fail to make any progress, based upon what was discussed at a press conference that was scheduled to last for an hour, but ended after only 12 minutes, but the president exposed himself as not being the force of nature he seems to believe he is.

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'Nothing more than conjecture': MAGA education chief slapped down by Trump-appointed judge

Embattled Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters’ effort to quash dissent on his plans to enact Christian and pro-Trump content into state schools' curriculum was slapped down Friday by a Trump-appointed judge, MSNBC reported Friday.

“Walters has pushed to convert Oklahoma’s public schools into hubs of right-wing religious indoctrination, through controversies such as his promotion of Bible-infused lesson plans and his attempt to require that schools show students a propaganda video of him praying for Donald Trump and attacking liberals,” wrote MSNBC reporter Ja’han Jones.

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In high-stakes summit, Trump, not Putin, budges

Donald Trump wanted to go bold -- a high-pomp, high-stakes summit with Vladimir Putin to test whether the Russian leader would compromise on the Ukraine war.

In the end, it looks like it was Trump, not Putin, who budged.

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Trump can now 'be safely ignored' by Putin after running out of 'cards to play': historian

Donald Trump’s saber-rattling, cajoling and tariff threats have proved to be ineffective bow that he has returned to Washington D.C. empty-handed after a failed summit with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.


According to historian Anne Applebaum, the American president is suddenly finding he has no cards to play when it comes to influencing his Russian counterpart.

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Questions raised about Trump's behavior after abrupt end to press conference

White House reporters covering President Donald Trump’s Alaska meeting Friday with Russian President Vladimir Putin were left “wondering whether Trump was frustrated” as the president remained uncharacteristically silent throughout the event, one White House reporter said Saturday.

The summit, arranged to negotiate an end to the Russo-Ukraine War, included what was billed as a joint press conference with Trump and Putin, but according to The Hill reporter Brett Samuels, ended unusually.

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'A defeat for the West’: European leaders fear Trump just tanked Ukraine’s leverage

Following President Donald Trump’s meeting and Russian President Vladimir Putin Friday, European leaders are growing disillusioned with the negotiations, telling The New York Times Saturday that they fear “Trump’s affinities with Russia and his admiration for Putin” will lead to weakened European security and Ukrainian sovereignty.

“That’s a defeat for the West,” said Ulrich Speck, a German foreign policy analyst, speaking with the New York Times Saturday. “It’s first and foremost Europe’s defeat.”

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Internal State Dept. documents on Trump/Putin summit left on Alaska hotel printer: NPR

State Department documents containing details about the meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin to discuss ending the war in Ukraine were left behind for anyone to see on a Alaska hotel printer, reports NPR.


The day after the summit concluded with little to no progress being made, NPR is reporting that the eight pages that were found “revealed previously undisclosed and potentially sensitive details about the Aug. 15 meetings between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir V. Putin in Anchorage.”

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One 'indelible image' of Trump after failed Putin summit will haunt him: analyst

Following Donald Trump’s unsuccessful summit with Vladimir Putin, longtime D.C. journalist Susan Glasser told an MSNBC panel that the U.S. president may rue one moment he shared with the Russian president that was caught on video and broadcast to the world.


Appearing on “The Weekend” with hosts Eugene Daniels and Jonathan Capehart on Saturday morning, Glasser was asked about Trump actually rolling out the red carpet for Putin on U.S. territory, which had been highly criticized beforehand, and she immediately pounced on that as damaging to the president.

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Trump buried by Spike Lee for new move to ‘roll back the clock'

Director Spike Lee railed against President Donald Trump Saturday over his plans to reshape Smithsonian museums as an attempt to “roll back the clock,” and argued the Trump administration had successfully erased the United States’ status as the “so-called beacon of democracy.”

Trump has ordered a “far-reaching review” of Smithsonian exhibits across the nation to ensure they fit his own “historical vision,” telling reporters this week that he wants museums to “talk about the history of our country in a fair manner, not in a woke or racist manner.”

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Alina Habba's future as a US attorney facing new hurdle next week: report

The ability of former Donald Trump lawyer Alina Habba to remain in her job as acting New Jersey U.S. attorney will face another hurdle next week when a federal judge will rule on arguments for and against the controversial appointee.


According to a report from Politico’s Matt Friedman, a skeptical Judge Matthew Brann, who sits on the bench in Pennsylvania’s Middle District, had Habba’s case drop in his lap and has announced he hopes to rule on Habba’s eligibility on Wednesday while admitting at the same time he expects whatever decision he makes will be appealed by the losing party.

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‘A multiple-count data felony:’ Trump administration busted for 'misleading' job claim

Trump administration officials have touted new data they say shows employment among native-born Americans has surged; economists, however, argue the administration’s interpretation is tantamount to a “multiple-count data felony,” and that the numbers simply don’t add up.

Last week, President Donald Trump fired the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner after the agency published an abysmal jobs report, and in their stead, appointed E.J. Antoni to head the agency, who earlier this month touted numbers that allegedly show employment among native-born Americans were up two million over the past year, and employment among foreign-born workers fell by around 237,000.

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