Trump News

Judge says Trump must face Central Park Five defamation suit

U.S. District Court Judge Wendy Beetlestone declined this week to dismiss a defamation lawsuit against President Donald Trump by a group of Hispanic and Black men known as the Central Park Five.

The men, who were wrongly imprisoned for the 1989 rape of a white jogger, sued Trump over comments he made during a debate with then-Vice President Kamala Harris last year.

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Trump's 2024 coalition set to be 'fractured' by his favorite policy: analysis

Polling analysis has shown that President Donald Trump won the 2024 election with a coalition of blue-collar voters who were concerned about inflation in the American economy.

The New Republic's Greg Sargent, however, looked at some recent polling on Trump's signature policies of slapping tariffs on nearly every nation in the world and has found that it is not at all popular among the people Trump has claimed it would benefit.

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'Unprecedented': Yale professor says Trump admin is 'destroying a generation of knowledge'

A professor with the Yale School of Public Health claimed that Donald Trump is "destroying a generation of knowledge" just like Mao Zedong did during China's Cultural Revolution.

Gregg Gonsalves wrote for The Nation, "What we are seeing is a purge—of the administrative state, of the universities, of expertise—that is consistent with events like the Cultural Revolution in China in the 1960s and ’70s, or the dismantling of the tsarist civil service after the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917."

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Doctors say Trump admin set to 'disrupt life-saving public health programs'

Researchers who study sickle cell anemia, autism, and more were all laid off this month from the CDC, thus, preventing potentially lifesaving research in its proverbial tracks, according to multiple CBS news sources.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. reportedly “wiped out the entire leadership team atop CDC's National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities.”

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'Uh oh:' Data analyst says Trump is sticking with policy driving Americans' 'No. 1 worry'

President Donald Trump backed down on most of his so-called reciprocal tariffs, but CNN's Harry Enten said the policy remains toxically unpopular.

Stocks surged Wednesday after Trump announced on Truth Social that he was halting duties against dozens of U.S. trading partners, although he raised them against China to 125 percent, but the data analyst said polling showed Americans are deeply concerned about the economic policies coming out of the White House.

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'Art of the panic attack': Conservative buries Trump defenders' scramble after flip-flop

Supporters of Donald Trump who spent over a week defending the president's sweeping tariff plans only to suffer whiplash after he did a 180 on Wednesday were ridiculed by a conservative columnist on MSNBC on Thursday morning.

During an appearance on "Morning Joe," Matt Lewis, a contributor to The Hill, laughed off attempts to spin the about-face –– a "pause" of ninety days –– as a planned move that demonstrates Trump's brilliance.

Speaking with host Jonathan Lemire, Lewis jumped right into it by explaining, "Look, Congress should be in charge of tariffs. And if they were to regain that power, then this could be done more strategically and less capriciously and that's what we saw."

ALSO READ: 'Not much I can do': GOP senator gives up fight against Trump's tariffs

"Look what happened yesterday, it's not," he continued before changing direction and joking "The Trump's defenders want to say this part of the art of the deal. It's the art of the panic attack."

"What we are seeing is, if you want stability, this ain't it, right?" he elaborated. "And I think that's part of why we may be seeing that kind of dead cat bounce today where the markets aren't quite returning. Part of it, I think, is that we still are going to have high tariffs. We're still going to have a bigger trade war with China."

"But look, I mean, just a week ago Donald Trump called it 'Liberation Day.' He was, you know, slapping on tariffs like he's throwing around confetti at a New Year's Eve party. And then yesterday he's backpedaling like a unicyclist on black ice. I mean it's whiplash. It's whiplash trying to follow this around," he quipped.

As for Trump's biggest supporters, he added, "So these Republicans are coming up with excuses and I went back, you know, I went back and dug into some of them and they're going to have to sort of reinvent what the excuse is. But last week they were saying how brilliant. That this was because tariffs are manly."

You can watch below or at the link here.

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'This wasn't the strategy': CNN host challenges GOP lawmaker to his face over Trump claim

CNN's John Berman challenged Rep. Carlos Gimenez (R-FL) after the Florida Republican claimed that President Donald Trump was following a thought-out strategy to manage the U.S. economy.

Wednesday, Trump abruptly announced that he was pausing tariffs on U.S. trading partners for 90 days, which caused the stock markets to surge. The action caused Trump's credibility to take a hit following mixed signals out of the White House on whether or not Trump would hold fast to his tariff threats, or negotiate. In the end, Trump chose to negotiate.

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Trump asserting powers 'even the most tyrannical monarchs' didn't have: analysis

A trio of legal experts is warning that the Trump Department of Justice is asserting that the president has unprecedented powers that were not even possessed by English monarchs.

Writing at Just Security, Yale Law School professors Harold Hongju Koh and Fred Halbhuber, along with Yale Law J.D. candidate Inbar Pe'er, point to recent assertions made by Trump DOJ lawyers in court that the United States Constitution does not prohibit President Donald Trump from issuing bills of attainder, which are orders that impose "a punishment on a specific person or group of people without first going through a trial."

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Trump move was 'just one more con on working people': Watchdog

"Trump's 'will he, won't he' tariff chaos is just one more con on working people."

That's what Melinda St. Louis, Global Trade Watch director at the watchdog group Public Citizen, said in a Wednesday statement after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a 90-pause for what he has called "reciprocal" tariffs, excluding China.

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'Addicted': Conservative WSJ writer warns GOP it's plunging itself into years of suffering

President Donald Trump's decision last week to impose sweeping global tariffs, despite warnings from economic experts against the move, and then to suddenly "pause" most of them on Wednesday has been met with sharp rebuke from political commentators.

In a Wall Street Journal article published Wednesday, conservative commentator Mark Helprin accused the Trump administration of being "too addicted to shock, awe and intimidation to see the harm it is doing to itself."

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Trump's 'retribution tour' just took a 'particularly dangerous' turn: CNN legal expert

President Donald Trump has ordered the investigation of two of his former political appointees who turned into critics, and CNN's Elie Honig said that would be a major test for attorney general Pam Bondi.

The president targeted Chris Krebs, who ran Trump’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and former senior Department of Homeland Security official Miles Taylor in an executive order stripping their security clearances and directing the Justice Department to open federal investigations of their tenures.

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'Crazy not to seize it': Democrats pushed to accept 'enormous opportunity' from Trump

As the GOP shows signs of turning on President Trump, Democrats need to take advantage of the moment, opined New York Times columnist Josh Barro Thursday morning.

“The president’s economically destructive and unpopular policies could not be easier for Democrats to message against, and yet some of them can’t figure out how.”

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'Shared pastries': NYT reports Trump admin 'broke policy' by meeting with terrorist group

President Donald Trump dispatched senior officials to meet with Hamas leaders, in a break with a long-standing policy against contacting a group the U.S. considers a terrorist organization.

Trump administration officials met three times with senior Hamas officials, according to sources who spoke to the New York Times, to discuss the release of the last living American Israeli hostage in Gaza, after the president has made clear he wants all hostages to be released.

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