Trump News

'Americans lost $4 trillion in savings': Dem bluntly deflates GOP Rep's Trump defense

During the panel segment of CNN's "State of the Union," Rep Hillary Scholten (R-MI) slapped aside claims by one of her Republican House colleagues about all the wonderful things Donald Trump has done since his re-election.

The conversation began when host Jake Tapper asked Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY), "Do you think that there are Trump voters who might have some regret today, given what's going on in the markets with their 401k's?"

"I think people are coming into this looking, look, the president has secured the border, border crossings are down 95 percent," she offered before breathlessly continuing. "He is deporting tens of thousands of people who have been dangerous, including murderers from New York City. He is also making sure that, look, we've seen. Mortgage rates come down, inflation has come down, egg prices have come down –– these are things you cannot ignore."

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"So is there a little concern about the market? Absolutely, there is," she conceded. "I think it is a little bit of a overexaggeration by the market at this moment and I would equate it to a little turbulence as you move to smooth skies, but you've seen trillions of dollars in investment. You've seen companies saying that they're going to expand operations here and of course, a great jobs report the other day, nearly a quarter of a million new jobs."

Offered a chance to respond, Rep. Scholten, who had been smiling and shaking her head, tuned to her colleague and explained, "A jobs report that that came out before the market started crashing and Americans lost $4 trillion in savings."

"You can't ignore, you know, you're talking about giving subsidies to farmers because you know how bad this is going to be," she continued. "You know America is losing under Trump. The American people are losing under Trump."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Did you use AI?' CBS host grills commerce secretary on tariffs for islands of penguins

CBS News host Margaret Brennan grilled Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick about why President Donald Trump placed tariffs on islands inhabited by penguins.

Brennan highlighted Trump's policy while speaking with Lutnick on Face the Nation on Sunday.

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Trump official rants about 'fake science' when cornered by CNN's Tapper over tariff claim

A combative Donald Trump Cabinet official attempted to lecture CNN's Jake Tapper about what she called "fake science" when he fact-checked her about the reasons European nations balk at some purchases from the U.S.

In a longer-than-normal interview, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins did her best to defend the president's tariff policies even when confronted with the ugly stock market collapse after Trump held his "Liberation Day" Rose Garden press conference, repeatedly assuring the "State of the Union" host that the president's economic brain trust contains the best people available.

Things grew heated after she complained about European nations refusing to buy U.S. beef and pork products due to the hormones used on the animals.

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

"We have watched our farmers and ranchers again, can't get our corn into Mexico, can't get our dairy into Canada, have Honduras buying more pork and poultry than the entire European Union, have a 700 percent tariff from Japan on our rice," she complained. "This is not okay and it is not sustainable. And for us to continue to build our agriculture, which is the backbone of our country, but also our manufacturing base, our energy, et cetera. for us to be able to do that, we have to put America first. "

"So those tariffs as the economy, the market begins to adjust, we will see a more positive as we move, I believe very quickly," she added.

" So just in point of fact, the reason that the European Union, even though they are our fourth biggest market for agricultural products, as you know, don't take as much American pork as you would like is because they have issues with hormones used in pork," Tapper explained.

"I don't want to get into a whole debate over that, but that's not, it's not an issue about tariffs," he continued. "But let me ask you about the computation of these tariffs because conservative economists at the American Enterprise Institute ––."

"Wait, wait, wait. Hold on, Jake," Rollins loudly interrupted. "No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, this is really important. You can't just say that. So here's the bottom line: they are using fake science and unsubstantiated claims to not take our products. So it isn't just that they have high tariffs."

"Thank you for making this point for me by the way, I meant to make it. It's not just the tariff numbers, it's the way they've treated our products," she persisted. "'Oh, sorry, we can't take your beef since 2002 because you use a certain type of feed.' That's just absolute bull. It is not correct and not appropriate. Our supplies, our farmers and ranchers, we produce the safest, the most secure, the best food in the world. And so to use that for the EU to say, 'Oh, my goodness, we can't do it because of this reason,' it's absolutely wrong. And it's not based on sound science."

"Okay, well, you can take that up with the Europeans," Tapper dryly replied.

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Protecting his own interests': Navarro slams Elon for breaking with Trump on tariffs

Fox News host Alexis McAdams confronted White House trade adviser Peter Navarro over a possible "rift" with billionaire DOGE administrator Elon Musk.

During a Sunday interview, McAdams noted that Musk had attacked Navarro on his X social media platform over President Donald Trump's tariffs.

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'What would you have him do?' Trump aide flails on ABC after tariffs 'tank the market'

White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett insisted that President Donald Trump did not intend to "tank" the stock market, even though his boss suggested otherwise on social media.

In a Sunday interview on ABC's This Week program, Hassett defended Trump's tariffs by pointing to the president's campaign.

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'Stupidity is policy': Ex-GOP lawmaker piles on Trump's 'fantasy as fact' economic woes

During an appearance on MSNBC's "The Weekend," a former Republican member of the House of Representatives jumped on Donald Trump's tariffs and the devastating effect it is having on American consumers, manufacturers and farmers.

Speaking with the hosts, ex-Rep. Denver Riggleman (R-VA) cited soybean farmers losing their livelihoods to make his case.

"The soybean market is destroyed, right?" he began. "What do we do now? Where's the money going to be for any type of subsidies for farmers? Now, how are you going to fund it? I mean, if you're defunding the IRS, how are you going to get the monies to actually come in to actually pay for all the subsidies for farmers right now?"

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

"There's a cascading effect of stupid and stupidity is terminal, right?" he continued. "And that's that's the issue that we have right now, is you have a terminal administration that thinks that stupidity is policy, right. and fantasy is fact. And when you have people that are like that making policy choices, we're in really big trouble."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Dude, you're complicit!' MSNBC's Steele burns down Musk for Saturday whine about tariffs

On Saturday, billionaire Elon Musk broke ranks with Donald Trump on tariffs in a video posted online and on Sunday morning MSNBC's Michael Steele was not in a forgiving mood.

At the start of MSNBC's "The Weekend," the co-hosts started off talking about Donald Trump enjoying himself at a golf tournament while the stock market is in a collapse due to his tariffs, before Steele turned on the tech billionaire who has been cheering the president on.

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Social Security is caught in a 'death spiral' due to DOGE's 'complete chaos': report

The Social Security Administration is being destroyed from within due to the machinations of Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) according to staffers who are speaking out.

In interviews with The Guardian, employees of the agency that tends to care and support of elderly Americans and administers survivor benefits are raising red flags at what one employee called "complete chaos" brought about by the intruding DOGE employees.

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UK readies to protect industry as US tariffs upend old order: Starmer

The "world as we knew it" is over and the UK "stands ready" to use direct state intervention to shelter industries from the US tariff storm, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Sunday.

US President Donald Trump's imposition of sweeping tariffs on Wednesday shows that "old assumptions can no longer be taken for granted," Starmer said in a op-ed for the Sunday Telegraph newspaper.

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'Hands Off!' Anti-Trump Americans flood Washington

When Liz Gabbitas joined thousands of fellow protesters Saturday in the US capital, she thought her message to the Trump administration would be best delivered through her homemade sign: a cardboard guillotine.

The 34-year-old librarian made clear she does not advocate violence, but nevertheless insisted that her one-meter (three-foot) sign, complete with tin foil blade, "communicated the visual language" of revolutionary fervor she longs for less than three months into Donald Trump's presidency.

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'Anxious': US farmers see tariffs threaten earnings

As President Donald Trump's sweeping global tariffs took effect this weekend, US farmers hoping for a profit this year instead found themselves facing lower crop prices -- and the prospect of ceding more ground in foreign markets.

"We're already getting below break-even at the current time," said Jim Martin, a fifth-generation Illinois farmer who grows soybeans and corn.

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Artist of 'distorted' portrait says Trump complaint harming business

The artist who painted US President Donald Trump in what he criticized as a "purposefully distorted" portrait has said his remarks have harmed her business.

Colorado removed the official portrait of Trump from display in the state's capitol building last month after the president complained that it was deliberately unflattering.

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MAGA activists are asking why no 'arrests' have been made over fraud sniffed out by DOGE

Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency have claimed to have found fraud, so why haven't any arrests been made? That's the question on the minds of some prominent MAGA activists.

Juanita Broaddrick, who supports Trump and claims that she was raped by then-Attorney General of Arkansas Bill Clinton, took to social media on Saturday to ask a question. Broaddrick, a supporter of Musk and DOGE, wondered, "Why haven't there been any arrests for the fraud and kickbacks Elon and Doge have found?"

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