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'Lost in translation': Trump issues threats so 'vague' they bamboozle expert

President Donald Trump boasted that he had extracted a $600 billion "gift" from the European Union after threatening to impose 35-percent tariffs, but an economic analyst cast doubt on whether that money would ever be paid.

The president told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Tuesday morning that he had cut tariffs against the EU to 15 percent in exchange for the payment, which he said could be invested in "anything we want," but CNBC's senior analyst Ron Insana told MSNBC's Ana Cabrera that Trump's tactics were too "vague" to tell if they're effective.

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'Living in a fantasy world': Critics pounce as Trump TV interview goes off the rails

U.S. President Donald Trump gave a lengthy interview to CNBC on Tuesday and critics quickly pounced on the president for telling a large number of false claims on topics ranging from monthly jobs numbers to the price of gas to international trade agreements.

Toward the start of the interview, CNBC host Joe Kernen pushed back on Trump's claims that the Bureau of Labor Statistics had "rigged" job creation numbers against him and debunked a Trump statement that the BLS had covered up negative jobs data revisions under the Biden administration until after the November 2024 presidential election.

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This is what 'really got under Trump's skin' with jobs report: White House insiders

President Donald Trump is still reeling over last week’s ‘awful’ jobs report according to an anonymous White House official, who told CNN’s Alayna Treene Tuesday what specifically “set him off” regarding the report.

Published last Friday, the figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that only 73,000 jobs were created in July, far below the projected 115,000, while also revising job numbers from May and June to be 258,000 lower than initial assessments. Within hours of the report being published, Trump fired BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, claiming the findings were “rigged.”

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Supreme Court used wrong statute to make monumental birthright citizenship ruling: expert

Conservative legal scholar Jack Goldsmith revealed that the U.S. Supreme Court relied on an incorrectly cited statute to justify its shocking birthright citizen ruling.

Goldsmith, a former United States Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel under the George W. Bush administration, wrote that the decision written by Justice Amy Coney Barrett contained a key error, as Slate legal reporter Mark Joseph Stern summarized.

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'Widely disliked' Hegseth ally tried to boot White House liaison out of Pentagon: report

A war has erupted between the Pentagon and the White House over the actions of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's acting chief of staff, according to The Washington Post.

Ricky Buria, a recently retired Marine Corps colonel, reportedly tried and failed to oust Matthew A. McNitt, who coordinates personnel policy as White House liaison at the Pentagon. White House officials "intervened" to prevent Buria from achieving his goal, the report said.

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Trump yells from White House roof in bizarre impromptu press conference

President Donald Trump shouted from the White House roof to reporters asking questions on the ground in a bizarre impromptu press conference.

While apparently surveying the site for a new White House ballroom on Tuesday, Trump was seen wandering around the building's roof.

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'Doesn’t sit well out here:' Trump caves on funding freeze after massive rural backlash

The Donald Trump Administration’s decision in late July to reverse course on a $6.2 billion funding freeze in education dollars came amid a swath of bipartisan backlash, though it's the pushback from local education officials in pro-Trump communities that may have moved the needle, argued reporter Toluse Olorunnipa Tuesday in The Atlantic.

“On the campaign trail, Trump’s promise to ‘send education back to the states’ was often greeted with applause, and the Supreme Court has allowed the president to go ahead with his plans to gut the Education Department,” Olorunnipa wrote.

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Major MAGA ally hurls threats over alleged links to billion-dollar Chinese fraud scheme

A Brazilian right-wing influencer who helped orchestrate Trump's recent sanctions against Brazil's Supreme Court is now facing scrutiny over alleged financial ties to a convicted Chinese fraudster.

Paulo Figueiredo, grandson of Brazil's former military dictator, stood alongside Eduardo Bolsonaro outside the White House in July after what they called "a very important round of meetings" with Trump administration officials. The pair had successfully lobbied for 50% tariffs on Brazilian imports and sanctions targeting Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes.

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Bombshell recording of Ghislaine Maxwell interview could be released—after Trump edits it

Questions have swirled in the wake of Justice Department official Todd Blanche's interview with convicted trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell, the one-time accomplice of Jeffrey Epstein. New reporting now reveals there's a full recording of the interview.

CNN reporter Kristen Holmes posted on X Tuesday that three administration officials confirmed that there is an audio recording and a transcript is being drafted.

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Pam Bondi admits pushing to release Epstein info that's already 'publicly available'

Attorney General Pam Bondi admitted that she was trying to release information about Jeffrey Epstein that was already "publicly available."

In a court filing on Tuesday, Bondi pushed U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman to unseal Epstein grand jury materials following outrage by President Donald Trump's MAGA supporters. Bondi also sought sealed materials from the case of Ghislaine Maxwell, an associate of Epstein's.

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'Why is he not out there?' Trump shamed for throwing rank-and-file Republicans to wolves

Republican Rep. Mike Flood returned to his home district in Nebraska to face a hostile crowd at a town hall Monday — and MSNBC's Joe Scarborough said the reception was an ominous sign for the GOP's chances in next year's midterm elections.

The Nebraska Republican was booed repeatedly and sharply questioned about President Donald Trump's "big beautiful bill," and the "Morning Joe" host panned Flood's efforts to defend the White House agenda as constituents chanted "tax the rich" and accused him of supporting fascism.

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Governor of deep red state sues Trump after 'whim' leaves residents reeling

TOPEKA — Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly joined 22 other states and Washington, D.C., in suing the Trump administration for terminating federal funding, which she said has led to cuts to state agriculture, health and safety programs “on a whim.”

The federal lawsuit, initially filed in June in Massachusetts, targets decisions from President Donald Trump and the Department of Government Efficiency that are rooted in a regulation allowing the administration to eliminate funding if it “no longer effectuates the program goals or agency priorities.”

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'If they get a bad back, they die': Trump says quiet part out loud in immigrant backtrack

President Donald Trump said the quiet part out loud when it comes to why immigrants tend to work farm jobs instead of Americans.

During a Tuesday phone interview on CNBC, Trump was asked if he had changed his position on deporting undocumented farm workers.

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