Trump News

'They're criticizing him': Trump official instantly meets fact check from CNN host

Labor secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer ran into an instant fact check from CNN's Pamela Brown on a statement issued by a major dockworkers union.

The International Longshore and Warehouse Union denounced president Donald Trump's tariffs in a strongly worded statement, arguing his trade wars would "kill jobs, raise costs, and fuel economic instability," and the dockworkers demanded fair trade policies that serve public interest instead of the "president's whims."

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'Sad white boys': Fear as Trump terror adviser shrugs off threat from 'inside the house'

National Security Advisor Mike Waltz was removed this week but a key Trump counterterrorism official remains in place at the White House — and he's planning a change in strategy to focus on jihadists rather than white supremacist groups that one leading expert said remain a significant domestic threat.

"The call is coming from inside the house," said Jon Lewis, a research fellow at George Washington University’s Program on Extremism. "We all understand why the right doesn't want to tackle domestic violent extremism — it's their base."

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Pam Bondi fires 'warning shot' at free press with 'most chilling' guidelines yet: report

“Attorney General Pam Bondi fired a warning shot at the free press last Friday,” according to the Editorial Board of the Washington Post.

They are concerned with the removal of a Justice Department regulation, which limited the government's ability to see the phone or email records of journalists.

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Trump accused of making US vulnerable by leaving 'most important job' essentially 'vacant'

Secretary of state Marco Rubio will take on additional responsibilities as the next national security adviser, becoming the first person since Henry Kissinger to serve in both roles simultaneously, but a White House veteran cast doubt on his ability to do both jobs effectively.

Rubio's position in Donald Trump's administration expanded after the president said he would nominate his first national security adviser, Mike Waltz, to be U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, but longtime national security official Brett McGurk told "CNN News Central" that the jobs were too demanding in the current era for one individual to perform those duties.

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Kash Patel accused of being spotted more in nightclubs than at his job

UPDATE: On May 5, 2025, MSNBC's Jonathan Lemire announced the claim about Kash Patel had not been verified. "This was a misstatement. We have not verified that claim," he said.


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'Not Kissinger': Marco Rubio's 'level of seriousness' questioned as he takes on new role

Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) was very blunt when asked on CNN Friday if he thought Marco Rubio could juggle "both being Secretary of State and national security adviser."

"No," Swalwell said, nearly before anchor Kate Bolduan finished her question.

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Experts issue 'preemptively gloomy' prediction for summer: 'You're going to see shortages'

The new jobs report contained some surprisingly good news, but a global economic analyst issued a "preemptively gloomy" prediction for the coming months.

Hiring slowed in April over the previous month, going from 228,000 in March to 177,000 last month, and a Commerce Department report this week showed the U.S. economy shrank over the first three months of this year, but CNN's Rana Foroohar warned that president Donald Trump's tariffs have not fully taken effect.

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Ex-GOP chair gives advice on how to stop Trump's 'hamster wheel of capitulation'

Citing a lesson to be learned from a popular children's book, former Republican National Committee (RNC) chair Michael Steele issued a warning to those who have capitulated to Donald Trump that they have created a monster that can never be satisfied.

Steele, currently the co-host of MSNBC's "The Weekend," wrote for the outlet that the president in 2003 was photographed reading "If You Give a Mouse a Cookie," to children and he seemed to miss the point of the book or, more likely, identified with the demanding mouse.

As Steele noted, the book is a cautionary tale about giving in to demands which only grow more ridiculous, which explains a lot about the re-elected president and his second-term power grab.

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Trump's latest move has Dems 'recruiting and training volunteers' in red districts: report

The Democratic National Committee is launching a new program aimed at recruiting and training volunteers in Republican districts to pressure their House members to oppose President Trump's so-called “big, beautiful bill," according to an Axios report.

Congresspersons Tom Barrett (R-MI), Don Bacon (R-NE), Mike Lawler (R-NY), and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) are just four of those being targeted in the new endeavor.

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At-risk GOP lawmakers panicked over their job security due to Medicaid cuts: report

House Republicans in easily flippable districts are banding together to pressure the GOP leadership to avoid any cuts to Medicaid in the new budget deal currently being hammered out.

According to a report from Politico, apprehensive GOP lawmakers are coalescing around Rep. David Valadao (R-CA) who is leading the pushback against possible cuts to Medicaid that could come back to haunt the entire Republican caucus when the midterms roll around next year.

As Politico's Ben Leonard and Meredith Lee Hill are reporting, a dozen GOP lawmakers signed onto a letter recently protesting the cuts being considered, stating it could cost the party their seats and, therefore, the majority overseen by House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA).

Also read: 'This is our shot': Dems believe MTG's new job gives 'golden opportunity' to destroy GOP

For his part, Valadao is maintaining a constantly updated text chain with his allies in this Republican Governance Group keeping "at-risk Republican incumbents who fear the political blowback of financing the party-line package with reductions to a safety-net program relied upon by nearly 70 million Americans" in the loop.

According to Rep. Nick LaLota (R-NY), "He’s been clear in his communications: We shouldn’t be throwing people off Medicaid who are designed to be on the program.”

Politico is reporting, "The outcome of the Medicaid debate carries high stakes not just for the Americans who use it for coverage, but for Valadao and his colleagues’ political futures, too. Valadao knows firsthand the consequences of making the wrong move in the health care debate. In 2018, he was part of the wave of House Republicans ousted after their votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which would have kicked millions of people off their insurance plans."

“We’re going through this partisan exercise to do what is supposed to be a tax bill, and it’s becoming a health care bill, which is what we’re trying to avoid, on an issue that desperately needs reform to make it better,” he warned.

You can read more here.

'It's what they deserve!' Trump issues new threat against Harvard

President Donald Trump reiterated his threats against Harvard University in his ongoing campaign against higher education.

The Trump administration has frozen $2.2 billion in federal funding to the venerable institution after its board refused demands for control over its governance structure and hiring practices, as well as periodic "audits" of faculty and student viewpoints, and the president has been threatening to revoke the university's tax-exempt status.

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JD Vance battered by WaPo readers over his 'train wreck' column praising Trump

Readers of the Washington Post ripped apart an op-ed written by Vice President J.D. Vance Friday morning, which praised President Donald Trump’s first 100 days.

Vance believes, “In his first term, President Trump also began the critical process of reindustrializing the American economy and rebalancing relations with our trading partners. That includes some like China, which have taken advantage of our workers for decades."

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Judges who rule against Trump face ominous threats: 'Somebody is going to get killed'

The families of at least 11 judges who have ruled against Donald Trump's administration have been targeted with threats and harassment, including sinister pizza deliveries, continuing an alarming trend related to the president and his legal troubles.

Tech mogul Elon Musk painted a target on the back of U.S. District judge James Boasberg's daughter after the judge ruled last month that administration officials could face criminal contempt charges for deporting migrants in defiance of a court order, and Trump supporters lashed out, reported Reuters.

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