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Trump claims GOP 'unified' on plan to bypass Dems on ICE funding: 'I will sign an order'

President Donald Trump thanked Republican congressional leaders for standing down on the funding bill that would have ended the partial government shutdown — instead moving away from the bipartisan legislation and extending the ongoing stalemate.

House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune had agreed on Wednesday to move forward with the bill but had reversed their decision by early Thursday. Now, Republicans have rejected the Senate’s bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security, according to The New York Times.

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Trump officials 'across the board' rip his Iran speech: 'Like listening to Joe Biden'

President Donald Trump drew scathing reviews from his own administration officials for his listless prime time address on the Iran war.

The 79-year-old president insisted military objectives would be accomplished “shortly, very shortly” and promised surging gas prices would “rapidly come back down" when the conflict ends, which he suggested was two to three weeks away, but Zeteo spoke with administration officials who were not impressed with the 19-minute speech.

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'Going to be much harder' for Trump as his Supreme Court leverage collapses: court insider

Donald Trump's remarkable winning streak at the Supreme Court is collapsing. After dominating the high court throughout his first year in office, the president is now facing serious resistance from the justices — and it's only going to get worse.

According to Politico, recent developments paint a grim picture for the Trump administration's legal agenda as he enters his lame duck years. The Court delivered "a stinging defeat over his tariff policy" and Wednesday's oral arguments on his birthright citizenship executive order were so hostile that "another loss may be looming."

Trump's legal dominance during 2025 appeared absolute. The administration won nearly all of the roughly 30 emergency appeals filed with the high court, spanning issues from immigration enforcement to mass federal employee firings to the abrupt termination of billions in federal grants and contracts.

But that winning streak is now visibly fracturing. Beyond the tariff defeat and the likely impending birthright citizenship setback, the Court has already rejected Trump's attempt to use the National Guard to control anti-ICE protests. The perception that "Trump has the court firmly in his pocket" is crumbling.

Legal experts explain what's happening: Trump's legal team was strategically selective.

Roman Martinez, who clerked for Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh, laid out the reality bluntly: "If you just look at the win-loss tracker, yes, it was pretty good for the administration over much of 2025, but the sample set was not a random selection of cases. It was the set of cases that President Trump's legal team chose to take up to the court. And those lawyers were savvy and selective, choosing to appeal the cases where their position was inherently stronger."

The dynamic is now shifting in a direction that terrifies the Trump legal team. "It's going to be much harder and the administration is going to win some, but they're also going to lose some," Martinez said.

As the Court transitions from fast-moving emergency appeals to more time-intensive regular case proceedings, Trump faces mounting resistance from the justices. The administration will no longer be able to rely on expedited processes that favored quick victories.

Solicitor General John Sauer has publicly acknowledged the looming difficulty. "Who's going to argue all these cases…?" he joked at a judges' conference last September, describing the "terrifying" prospect of full arguments on all the emergency cases in which Trump racked up easy wins during his early months in office.

Trump's big TV address underwhelms MAGA host: 'I was like, that's it?'

Pro-MAGA Real America's Voice host Gina Loudon revealed that she was underwhelmed by President Donald Trump's Wednesday night address to the nation about the war in Iran.

During a Thursday morning segment, Loudon reflected on the speech with co-hosts David Brody and Terrence Bates.

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Trump made 'profound miscalculation' that will harm rest of his presidency: analysis

Donald Trump's administration is still struggling to fix a mistake made that will likely affect the rest of the presidency, a political analyst has claimed.

While the president's team launched strikes on Iran last month, the financial consequences of the war could unravel Trump in the latter half of his presidency. Analysis from Brahma Chellaney in The Hill noted that Trump had grossly underestimated the war in Iran and the consequences of strikes carried out in March.

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Trump is about to become even more 'disoriented' as political reality sets in: ex-pal

During an appearance on MS NOW’s “Morning Joe,” former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) suggested that recent events demonstrate Donald Trump is losing his power as the courts and Republican lawmakers balk at his demands and he is beginning to face a new political reality.

Not long after political analyst John. Heilemann observed on MS NOW that Trump is becoming a “lame duck” as some of his key allies edge away from him, Christie, speaking from his experience as a termed-out governor, pointed out that it can make someone used to power lose their bearings.

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'Decidedly lethargic' Trump 'tried to slap some gold paint' on Iran fiasco: analyst

President Donald Trump failed to make a case for war against Iran when he finally addressed the public more than a month after launching the military operation, according to an analysis.

In a new column published Thursday morning by MS NOW, journalist Paul Waldman analyzed the 79-year-old president's prime time address from the White House and found he did little to communicate the war's necessity or why risking American lives and the global economy was worth the effort.

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Trump showed his hand in latest speech — and the world should be worried: expert

Donald Trump has no idea how to end the war with Iran, according to a defense and security expert urging the world to take note.

Christopher Bucktin says the president has delivered a speech that highlighted the United States' failures in Iran, and that backing out is effectively the only option Trump's administration has. Whether that moment comes, The Mirror's US editor argues, is yet to be seen.

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Trump kicks off morning with new furious attack on Supreme Court

President Donald Trump started his Thursday morning with a brief but furious attack on the Supreme Court on his Truth Social platform.

"Kangaroo Court!!!" wrote Trump.

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Trump's 'rupture' with two key allies has pushed him into 'lame duck' territory: analyst

As part of a discussion on Donald Trump’s address to the nation on Wednesday night, where he once again restated his stance on waging war on Iran, MS NOW’s Jonathan Lemire and “Morning Joe” regular John Heilemann agreed that two of his closest allies backing away from him is a sign that he is in the twilight of his political career.

As Heilemann, a political strategist, noted, no one in the White House could be happy about the headlines that followed the address, because it did little to convince skeptical voters that things are going well as they watch the price of fuel skyrocket.

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Trump preparing to 'send a message' GOP lawmakers don't want to hear: analysis

A surgeon general appointment could burst the Republican Party's bubble, according to an analyst suggesting Donald Trump may enrage many representatives.

Casey Means is the likely next surgeon general, with the White House reportedly telling the GOP to push through her nomination. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt issued a statement regarding the potential appointment of Means to the post, with the Trump administration clearly backing the candidate.

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GOP in disarray as Senate seat pick-up slips away: 'It's a mess'

The Republican Party's dysfunction in Georgia is turning what should have been a winnable Senate seat into a likely Democratic victory. The culprit: Donald Trump and Gov. Brian Kemp can't get along, leaving the GOP field fractured and Sen. Jon Ossoff (D) sitting pretty.

According to Politico, Republicans expected to flip this Senate seat and strengthen their grip on the chamber. Instead, they're watching Ossoff cruise toward re-election with $24 million in the bank, a massive name-ID advantage, and zero Democratic competition in his primary.

Meanwhile, the GOP is descending into chaos. The May 19 primary will almost certainly trigger an expensive, brutal mid-June runoff as Republicans batter each other over the nomination.

Rep. Mike Collins (R-GA), a Trump ally, leads in polling. Rep. Buddy Carter and Kemp-endorsed former football coach Derek Dooley are fighting for second. But a large share of voters remain undecided, revealing how chaotic the race truly is.

"If Ossoff could write a playbook for how he wants this primary to go, this is exactly it," said one GOP operative. "Georgia is like a 'red-headed stepchild' not getting any attention from Washington."

The collapse traces directly to GOP incompetence. Republicans failed to recruit a strong candidate or unify the field. The National Republican Senatorial Committee's recruitment efforts were lackluster. But most damaging: Trump and Kemp refuse to agree on a candidate, forcing an expensive primary that bleeds the eventual nominee's resources before facing Ossoff.

GOP strategists are already pointing fingers. "It's a mess that could have been much less messy if they had figured this out six months ago," said one strategist. "Everybody's resigned to this going to May and then a June runoff and then pick up the pieces after that."

Ryan Mahoney, a GOP strategist, highlighted the stark disparity in positioning.

"Jon Ossoff has $24 million. Jon Ossoff is on TV all of the time, carefully articulating his positions, grilling Tulsi Gabbard — really being methodical. He has tons of resources — great name ID, a lot of exposure — while the Republicans are fighting against each other, trying to see who can break out and ultimately be the nominee. He's just in a great position."

The Georgia race is now a microcosm of the GOP's broader midterm problem: voters are souring on Trump's agenda, Democrats are competitive in red states, and Republicans are too busy fighting each other to mount an effective offense.

Justice Department has 'gone off the rails' for Trump's 'pretzel logic': analysis

The Justice Department is bending to what Donald Trump wants to happen on the birthright citizenship case, a legal analyst has warned.

Joyce Vance, the former US state attorney for the Northern District of Alabama, warned that the DoJ has lost its way in its willingness to back the president's executive order. Trump signed an executive order into law on January 20, 2025, detailing new guidelines for what would and would not constitute birthright citizenship.

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