Trump News

'Not what I expected': Black Americans for Trump member unable to defend president's chaos

During an appearance on CNN's "Table for Five," Black Americans for Trump Coalition member Melik Abdul came clean and admitted he had no answers or excuses for the president's "chaotic week."

Speaking with the panel, he singled out mixed messages from the Trump White House as the tariffs rolled out, that caused the stock market to "tank," before expressing his dismay.

During his long monologue, he professed, "It is what I can only describe as a very chaotic week. Because you're right, a lot of the things that you pointed out, Donald Trump, they were full-throated in this, and this is the thing: it was the certainty that this is going to work."

"And as the market got that little bump and they say, 'See, this is what deal-making is, this is art of the deal.' and then we see a different story," he continued. "And it is the messaging where you have Donald Trump saying one thing. You may have [White House press secretary] Karoline Leavitt saying another thing, you may have [Commerce Secretary Howard] Lutnick saying another thing, you may have [Treasury Secretary Scott] Bessent saying another thing."

RELATED: Trump's Treasury secretary 'looking for an exit door' after two months on the job: MSNBC

Keep reading... Show less

'Caricature of a mad king': Analysis pegs 'narcissist' Trump as 'completely out of touch'

During his first term, President Donald Trump angrily clashed with some of the traditional non-MAGA conservatives he appointed — including the secretary of state (Rex Tillerson), White House chief of Staff (retired Gen. John F. Kelly), national security adviser (John Bolton), and U.S. attorney general (Jeff Sessions). But with his second administration, Trump has avoided such conflicts by surrounding himself with ultra-MAGA Republicans and unquestioning loyalists.

Tillerson, Kelly, Bolton and Sessions gave Trump what they considered constructive criticism; this time, critics say, Trump's appointees are telling him what he wants to hear.

Keep reading... Show less

'This is bull!' George Conway dismantles Trump administration's 'game playing'

Conservative attorney George Conway hammered away at Donald Trump and his administration's efforts to deny responsibility for mistakenly shipping a 29-year-old Maryland man to El Salvador and then doing all they can do to avoid bringing him back.

Noting the DOJ's footdragging on repatriating Kilmar Abrego García, Conway told the hosts of MSNBC's "The Weekend' that Trump officials are full of it when they claim their hands are tied.

With co-host Symone Sanders Townsend prompting her guest with "This is the same facility that the DHS secretary [Kristi Noem] who has been playing dress up, she went down to El Salvador, to this prison and played dress up ––."

"With the $50,000 Rolex watch," Conway interjected.

"I saw the watch, honey," Sanders Townsend continued. "They put her in the prison and got her out. The United States government is paying for the men that have been sent to this facility; they literally gave millions and millions of dollars to El Salvador for payment for the men that are there. Why can't they just get him out?"

"That's a good question," her guest replied. "I mean, I looked up an article today that was from February from the Associated Press when [Marco] Rubio said, 'Oh my gosh. The president of El Salvador has made this wonderful offer to us.and he basically said, not only we can, not only is he offering to hold migrants, he's offering to hold American citizens.'"

"He's offered to do the same for dangerous criminals currently in custody and serving their sentence in the United States even though they're U.S. citizens or legal residents," he added before pointing out, "If you're doing. that you can get them back."

"This is bull, okay? And they're playing games with this federal judge just like that lawyer said," he snapped. "They're sending somebody to the court who probably doesn't know the answer. Like all you say, 'I'm going to send you to court. I ain't going to tell you anything you can say.' So then the lawyer just goes, 'I'm sorry, judge, I don't have any answer to your questions,' even though these are basic questions."

You can watch below or the link.

- YouTube youtu.be

Senior Social Security official removed by security after pointing out illegal plans: WaPo

According to a new report from the Washington Post, a senior official in the Social Security Administration was marched out of his office after he confronted one of Elon Musk's outside hires over a change in policy that he deemed illegal.

The report states that "well-regarded" official Greg Pearre raised objections when Scott Coulter, the newly installed chief information officer, detailed his plans to transfer the migrants’ names into a Social Security death database, thereby halting their ability to make a living by working.

According to the report, Pearre told Coulter, "the plan was illegal, cruel and risked declaring the wrong people dead, according to three people familiar with the event," which led to his being escorted out of his office and placed on leave.

The WaPo's Hannah Natanson, Lisa Rein and Meryl Kornfield are reporting, "They walked Pearre out of the building, capping a momentous internal battle over the novel strategy — pushed by Musk’s U.S. DOGE Service and the Department of Homeland Security — to add thousands of immigrants ranging in age from teenagers to octogenarians to the agency’s Death Master File. The dataset is used by government agencies, employers, banks and landlords to check the status of employees, residents, clients and others."

RELATED: Untested new software installed by DOGE employees crashing Social Security servers: report

The report notes that multiple experts agree with Pearre, stating it violates privacy laws as flagrantly falls under falsifying government records.

According to Devin O’Connor of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, "This is an unprecedented step. The administration seems to basically be saying they have the right to essentially declare people equivalent to dead who have not died. That’s a hard concept to believe, but it brings enormous risks and consequences.”

The report adds that a call was made to Coulter, "an investment firm founder named to the top technology job on March 27," on Friday asking for comment and that he hung up on the Post reporter.

Keep reading... Show less

'It’s already in the cards': Trump impeachment urged by WSJ editorial board member

In a column published late Friday, a member of the Wall Street Journal editorial board claimed it would be "desirable" to subject Donald Trump to a third impeachment to make up for the damage he has done to the U.S. economy with his "ill-founded" trade war.

According to longtime columnist Holman W. Jenkins Jr., Trump's on-again, off-again tariff threats almost makes it appear he wants to be impeached, with Jenkins writing, "A future Trump impeachment seemed all but guaranteed by last Wednesday morning. It seems only slightly less likely now. It may even be desirable to restore America’s standing with creditors and trade partners."

As he sees it, the president's last great achievement was being re-elected in 2024, and the damage he has been creating since then belies his promise of a "golden age," so an impeachment is "already ion the cards."

"No consensus or even significant coalition exists for trying to force into existence a new American 'golden age' with tariffs, which anyway is like asking a chicken to give birth to a lioness. He invented this mission out of his own confused intuition," he accused.

Noting that conservative historian Niall Ferguson labeled Trump's trade policy going "full retard," he contributed, "I go with 'neurotic' for the word’s wider applicability to any leader who, lacking a clear bead on his times, fabricates a gratuitously ambitious mission to meet his misguided sense of importance."

"Nobody in Mr. Trump’s orbit actually shares his belief in the magical efficacy of tariffs because it makes sense only in a world that doesn’t exist, where other countries don’t retaliate," he pointed out before concluding, "The founders never anticipated today’s instantly responsive trillion-dollar financial markets. And yet these markets neatly adumbrate the founders’ scheme of checks and balances, also known as feedback. Mr. Trump, still sane enough to appreciate what’s good for Mr. Trump, listened this week to their feedback."

You can read more here (subscription required).

Trump carves up world and international order with it

By casting doubt on the world order, Donald Trump risks dragging the globe back into an era where great powers impose their imperial will on the weak, analysts warn.

Russia wants Ukraine, China demands Taiwan and now the US president seems to be following suit, whether by coveting Canada as the "51st US state", insisting "we've got to have" Greenland or kicking Chinese interests out of the Panama Canal.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump envoy suggests allied zones of control in Ukraine

Keith Kellogg, US President Donald Trump's special envoy to Ukraine, suggested British and French troops could adopt zones of control in the country, in an interview with The Times newspaper published Saturday.

Kellogg suggested they could have areas of responsibility west of the Dnipro river, as part of a "reassurance force", with a demilitarised zone separating them from Russian-occupied areas in the east.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump replaces Obama portrait with painting of... himself

Donald Trump took his rivalry with Barack Obama to the walls of the White House Friday, replacing a portrait of the former US president with one of himself surviving an assassination attempt.

The 78-year-old Republican moved the picture of the Democrat, the only Black US president, to the opposite side of the famed residence's grand entrance hallway.

Keep reading... Show less

Iran delegation in Oman for high-stakes nuclear talks with US

Iran's top diplomat arrived in Oman on Saturday and began laying the groundwork for high-stakes nuclear talks with the United States that are unfolding under the threat of military action.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi flew in ahead of the foes' highest-level discussions since an international agreement on Iran's nuclear programme crumbled after US President Donald Trump pulled out during his first term in office.

Keep reading... Show less

Details of Trump's medical exam to be released ‘as soon as we possibly can’: White House

The White House on Friday pledged to release a detailed update of Donald Trump’s health after the oldest president in U.S. history underwent his annual medical examination earlier in the day.

“I have never felt better, but nevertheless, these things must be done!” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform before the examination, which was performed at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.

Keep reading... Show less

‘Apocalyptic’: Experts warn Trump plan would be ‘science demolition derby’

President Donald Trump’s proposed 2026 budget reportedly seeks to effectively dismantle the scientific research arm of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, shut down critical weather laboratories, and slash the agency’s budget by more than 25 percent. NOAA serves as the primary source of weather forecasting in the United States and is a vital contributor to global forecasting efforts.

SCIENCE, the flagship journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, says that it has seen an internal document, and reports that the administration’s goal is to end climate research at NOAA.

Keep reading... Show less

'She can't spell AI!' MSNBC's Rachel Maddow speechless at Trump official's 'terrible' flub

A.1. Steak Sauce is having a moment after Education Secretary Linda McMahon mixed the popular steak-topping condiment with artificial intelligence – and MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow was all over the gaffe she called “delicious.”

Maddow in the opening minutes of her Friday show paused to highlight the latest blunder to emerge from President Donald Trump’s administration after she first highlighted the infamous “Signalgate” debacle, and the president’s own misdialed call this week to his estranged former National Security Adviser, H.R. McMaster, who he proceeded to curse out.

Keep reading... Show less

'Patients simply cannot survive': Trump could wreck supply chain for critical drug

One of the potential unintended consequences of President Donald Trump's draconian new tariff regime on China could be the collapse of the supply chain to manufacture a vital and inexpensive drug necessary for hospitalized people, The Washington Post reported on Friday.

Specifically, the anticoagulant drug heparin, vital for ensuring some patients don't develop blood clots on lines that put nutrients directly into their bodies, requires ingredients from Chinese plants — which could be part of the new 145 percent tax Trump is enacting on that country.

Keep reading... Show less