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'Political suicide': These voters are turning against Trump as harsh poll reveals reality

Political strategists were warning the GOP to take health care concerns among Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Make America Healthy Again followers seriously after a new poll revealed the key voting bloc that helped elect President Donald Trump was now turning on him, according to reports on Monday.

If Trump and Republicans ignore the signal, then it could cost them the midterms, according to a Politico poll. The results found that Trump voters who had pushed for a rollback on vaccine recommendations and an adjusted food pyramid were divided over MAHA progress. Meanwhile, most voters see Democrats as better equipped to address key health issues in advance of the 2026 midterm elections. And 41 percent of MAHA fans who voted for Trump, said the president has not done enough to make America healthy again, according to the poll conducted by Public First from March 13 to 18, which surveyed 3,851 adults online.

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'Trump is in trouble' as he faces 'his Waterloo' in Iran: columnist

One month into the Iran war, Donald Trump is discovering that his signature tactic — construct a narrative, declare it true, and force the world to submit — doesn't work when the other side refuses to play along.

According to Guardian columnist David Smith, Trump's decades-long operating principle has finally collided with an immovable object: geopolitical reality that cannot be wished away or spun into submission.

Because of that, "Trump is in trouble," he asserted.

"Donald Trump keeps declaring victory in Iran. But saying it over and over does not make it so." While the president insists his military campaign is a historic success, "the world is bracing for a conflict that continues to metastasize and could wreak havoc on the global economy."

Trump's strategy has worked before — in Manhattan boardrooms, on reality television, even at the highest levels of Washington power. But Iran represents something fundamentally different: a conflict where "Trump's unique brand of 'truthful hyperbole' has collided with the truthful truth. His reality distortion field has run into a brick wall," Smith wrote.

The track record of Trump's fantasy-based policymaking is well documented. During his first term, he made more than 30,000 false and misleading claims, according to the Washington Post. He constructed entire alternate realities. But that strategy catastrophically failed when COVID-19 arrived — hundreds of thousands of deaths couldn't be wished away — and voters rejected him in 2020.

Now the Iran war is exposing the same fatal vulnerability at catastrophic scale. The conflict has already cost 13 American lives and billions of dollars, yet the Iranian regime shows no signs of collapse. Instead, exactly as predicted, "Tehran has triggered a global energy crisis by blocking the strait of Hormuz." Opinion polls show the war is deeply unpopular, and a ground invasion would be even more so. "There is no obvious exit strategy."

Joel Rubin, former deputy assistant secretary of state, articulated the core problem: Trump's belief in his own mental supremacy fundamentally misunderstands how warfare actually functions.

"Trump clearly is a real believer in the power of the mind to control events and to shape how people perceive events and shape reality," Rubin said. "The problem with that in the case of the war is the Iranians don't have to bend to that. There are time-tested ways to win wars and end wars through force of arms or diplomacy that have nothing to do with the mind and willpower and willing it because the other side will do what we want. He's going to buck up against that and the sooner he relies not just on the reality of military power but the reality of diplomatic power the more likely he is to be successful."

Larry Jacobs, director of the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance at the University of Minnesota, was more blunt about the implications.

"Iran is Trump's Waterloo. This is the demolition of the Donald Trump myth. His supporters rave about his instincts and his improvisational style but the other interpretation is that he doesn't know what he's doing, that he hasn't taken care to investigate the devastating consequences of his actions and so he's digging himself deeper and deeper into a quagmire. This is plain to all."

'Keep it up': Lindsey Graham cheers Trump's threat denounced by critics as war crime

President Donald Trump sent shockwaves Monday morning after issuing fresh threats to destroy Iranian infrastructure used to produce clean drinking water – which, if carried out, would likely constitute a war crime – and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) was right behind the president to cheer him on.

“Just had a very good discussion with [Trump] about his recent statement regarding the consequences to Iran if they do not agree to an acceptable peace deal,” Graham wrote Monday in a social media post on X. “I support diplomatic efforts to end the conflict consistent with our military objectives, but it takes two to tango.”

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ABC host busts Marco Rubio contradicting Trump on Iran: 'Is that the case or is it not?'

ABC News host George Stephanopoulos called out Secretary of State Marco Rubio after he said the U.S. was negotiating with "lunatics" in Iran, even though President Donald Trump had suggested new negotiators were reasonable people.

"You call them lunatics, but the president just had this post where he says we're in discussions with a new and more reasonable regime," Stephanopoulos told Rubio in a Monday interview on Good Morning America. "Let me try to pin you down on that. Who is this new and more reasonable regime?"

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'They break everything': MS NOW co-host gets choked up over ICE at airports

Reacting to comments made by Donald Trump’s border czar Tom Homan that agents will continue to haunt the nation’s airports for the foreseeable future, MS NOW’s Mika Brzezinski choked up when describing the damage the Department of Homeland Security has done to the nation’s psyche.

The “Morning Joe” co-host claimed she was glad that ICE agents would be seen by families and travelers because it would be a reminder of what they have done on the nation's streets at Trump's request.

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Trump achieves lowest approval rating of political career in blistering new poll: report

While President Donald Trump has long been plagued by historically low approval ratings, a new poll shared exclusively with Zeteo revealed Monday that the president may very well have just scored the single-worst approval rating of his political career.

Conducted by the University of Massachusetts Amherst, the new national poll revealed that “only 33% of Americans approve of the job he’s doing,” and that a staggering 62% disapproved, Zeteo reported. The poll’s publication also came just days after Trump promoted the idea of running for an unconstitutional third term, the timing of which exposed “just how delusional our president really is,” Zeteo’s Andrew Perez wrote.

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Experts flag 'extremely worrisome' trend as Trump's election interference tactics spread

Republican officials across multiple states are conducting aggressive investigations into prior elections, employing tactics that mirror President Donald Trump's 2020 fraud claims — including ballot seizures and sweeping non-citizen voter allegations that state election authorities and experts say lack legal foundation.

In Arizona's Maricopa County, officials referred more than 200 people for prosecution based on the SAVE database, which election experts warn produces false positives, reported CNN. Michigan's Macomb County Clerk promoted noncitizen voter findings based on jury records, prompting Democratic Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson to determine that some individuals flagged were actually citizens. California Sheriff Chad Bianco, a gubernatorial candidate, seized 650,000 ballots from the state's 2025 special election to investigate discrepancies alleged by conservative activists.

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MS NOW panel pounces on Trump's early-morning threat to commit 'war crimes'

Moments after Donald Trump posted online that he is considering destroying Iran's entire power infrastructure and desalination plants, MS NOW host Jonathan Lemire and national security analyst David Rohde expressed shock that the president is admitting that he is willing to commit what are undeniably war crimes.

Coming back from a commercial break, Lemire broke the news that the president had posted, in part, on Truth Social, “... if the Hormuz Strait is not immediately ‘Open for Business,’ we will conclude our lovely ‘stay’ in Iran by blowing up and completely obliterating all of their Electric Generating Plants, Oil Wells and Kharg Island (and possibly all desalinization plants!), which we have purposefully not yet ‘touched.’ This will be in retribution for our many soldiers, and others, that Iran has butchered and killed over the old Regime’s 47 year ‘Reign of Terror.’”

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​'Warning sign': New protest against Trump predicted to 'come back to haunt Republicans'

Millions of Americans took to the streets Saturday to protest against President Donald Trump, and panelists on "CNN This Morning" agreed that widespread antipathy should be a warning to Republicans.

This weekend's No Kings rallies drew a reported 8 million people, and Bloomberg's Mario Parker said each round of demonstrations has grown as voters reject the president's policies.

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Election conspiracists claim Markwayne Mullin got them meeting with 2024 Trump campaign

Markwayne Mullin, the new head of Homeland Security, arranged for a group promoting a debunked claim about election software linked to Venezuela being used to manipulate U.S. votes to meet with the Trump campaign three weeks before the 2024 election, Raw Story has learned.

Martin Rodil, a Washington, D.C. area consultant, briefed Susie Wiles — then co-campaign manager and now chief of staff to President Donald Trump — at Mar-a-Lago in October 2024. Patrick Byrne, the former Overstock.com CEO, has said Mullin, then a U.S. senator, arranged that meeting.

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Trump threatens to destroy drinking-water infrastructure in explosive new Iran threat

President Donald Trump erupted on social media Monday morning with a series of new threats against Iran, including a threat to “possibly” destroy their ability to produce clean drinking water.

As the U.S. war against Iran continues to send oil prices skyrocketing, Trump has reportedly been looking for a way out of the conflict he himself initiated late last month after authorizing Operation Epic Fury. Although Trump has repeatedly claimed to be in peace talks with Iranian officials, Tehran has denied those claims, and said they have ignored the Trump administration’s attempts to restart negotiations.

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Trump's bid to 'calm the markets' failing as he now has 'zero credibility' on Iran: expert

Any hope that Donald Trump might have that he can reassure Wall Street that the war in Iran is going well is quickly falling by the wayside as investors and financial advisers turn a deaf ear to the president's victory boasts.

As Joe Scarborough put it on Monday, the president has failed to "calm the markets."

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Trump Cabinet official's 'History Rocks' tour falling apart over boycotts and protests

A planned tour across the US by Education Secretary Linda McMahon is off to a rocky start as school parents either cancel her visits or plan protests against the Donald Trump Cabinet member.

According to the Washington Post, McMahon's "History Rocks!" school visits have already been canceled in at least four locations — including stops in Massachusetts, Alabama, and two in McMahon's home state of Connecticut. Additional events in Wisconsin, New Jersey, and Illinois are facing organized protests.

The core problem: the tour is being sponsored exclusively by conservative and religious organizations, creating an obvious partisan tenor that contradicts claims of nonpartisanship.

The America 250 Civics Education Coalition that backs the tour is led by the America First Policy Institute, a pro-Trump advocacy group, and includes Turning Point USA, Moms for Liberty, and the Heritage Foundation. The coalition deliberately excluded liberal groups and prominent nonpartisan civics organizations like Civx Now, which boasts more than 450 member organizations.

"I just found it hypocritical," said Red Zellner, a senior at Murphy High School in Mobile, Alabama. "They tried to say their tour was apolitical while being very publicly supported by strongly political groups."

Zellner organized a protest after learning of McMahon's visit. Within hours, the event was canceled. McMahon relocated to another Alabama school instead.

In Connecticut, parents moved with similar speed. Tracy Rodriguez objected immediately after learning McMahon was scheduled to visit her children's elementary school.

"This tour is publicly backed by right-wing extremist groups. I think it's inappropriate to have that in our schools," Rodriguez told superintendent Michael Testani.

Four hours later, the district canceled the event. Testani reported receiving complaints from "many families" who said they were considering keeping their children home.

In Massachusetts, superintendent Caitlin Paget demanded transparency. She refused to allow the event unless she knew who would speak and what content would be presented. When the Education Department offered vague assurances that Turning Point wasn't "involved in the program itself," Paget remained skeptical — and ultimately, the event was rescheduled and never materialized.

The administration offered a cover story. An Education Department spokesperson claimed the Massachusetts event was "postponed" due to weather concerns, but online records reveal there was no bad weather in Sutton that day, as Paget confirmed.

McMahon has dismissed all criticism, claiming opponents are trying to "distort a celebration of America's 250th anniversary."

"Some have tried to brand this tour as 'radical,' 'dangerous' and 'partisan indoctrination.' How absurd," she said in a statement. "What you see is not politics — it is a shared commitment to our nation's story."

But the pattern is unmistakable: when schools demand transparency and nonpartisan sponsorship, the tour retreats — or disappears entirely.

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