Trump News

'Not what I voted for': Trump voter attending anti-Trump protest talks to MSNBC reporter

A person who voted for Donald Trump was spotted at an anti-Trump protest on Saturday, according to a MSNBC reporter.

The reporter over the weekend said she rarely runs into actual MAGA voters at anti-Trump demonstrations like the one she was attending, but noted that this man was very concerned about Elon Musk and DOGE's work.

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'Turbulence far away': NYT exposes Trump 'moneymaking weekend' amid huge 'market meltdown'

As the global markets were tumbling at record levels, President Donald Trump was reportedly on a money-making spree in Mar-a-Lago.

As everyday folks were checking in on their 401ks and worrying about losing their Social Security payments, Trump's family was pushing numerous separate money-making schemes, the New York Times reported on Saturday.

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'Scary' White House insider's observation about Trump should set off alarms: analyst

In a column published on Saturday, Washington Post political analyst Aaron Blake noted a description of Donald Trump by an anonymous White House official that he feels should have received more attention.

Describing it as scary, Blake noted it not only may have a bearing on Trump's attitude about the sweeping tariffs he is putting in place but also for what it says about how his second term could play out.

Specifically, he cited a report from the post that included the Trump, administration insider bluntly stating, "[Trump's]... at the peak of just not giving a f--k anymore. Bad news stories? Doesn’t give a f--k. He’s going to do what he’s going to do. He’s going to do what he promised to do on the campaign trail.”

ALSO READ: 'Came as a surprise to me': Senators 'troubled' by one aspect of government funding bill

That led the analyst to point out the country is facing, "... a very different Trump presidency than the first version," with scarcely a member of his own party willing to call him out.

Noting the second-term Trump White House is stocked with Trump loyalists more than willing to do his bidding, Blake suggested, "you could scarcely rule out Trump’s deciding to go down with the tariff ship, if that’s what it comes to."

"It’s now become clear that the old Trump was contained because of the people around him and his own political considerations. The new Trump is a different animal," he wrote before warning, "And when he finally does go too far — and risks his fellow Republicans’ hides — they have little to fight back with. Which is what we’re seeing now. To the extent Trump does walk the party into destruction, they’ve handed him the leash."

You can read more here.

Trump’s domestic policy agenda 'in doubt' after Saturday House GOP rebellion: report

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is once again under the gun after multiple members of his caucus put him on notice they have no plans to go along with a budget plan a budget plan approved by their GOP counterparts in the Senate Saturday morning.

According to a report from Politico's Benjamin Guggenheim, it didn't take long after the GOP-controlled Senate passed a "a budget resolution that unlocks their ability to pass a party-line bill later this year," before Republican fiscal hawks began making it known that what they have seen is a non-starter for them.

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'Thirty to forty' House GOP lawmakers at risk of 2026 defeat due to Trump: analyst

"A message to Republicans: watch out," was the advice of one MSNBC political analyst on Saturday morning when asked about the election results in Wisconsin and Florida this past week.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "The Weekend," analyst Dave Jolly, who previously served as a Republican in the House representing Florida, was asked whether the actions of Donald Trump and Elon Musk are "waking up the sleepy beast" that is the electorate.

That led Jolly to issue his warning to GOP lawmakers and explain to co-host Alicia Menendez, "What Donald Trump is doing with a collapsed Republican Congress is not good for the American people, regardless of your party registration."

ALSO READ: ‘I miss lynch mobs’: The secretary of retribution's followers are getting impatient

"I mean, as you described, these are ruby red seats and the one in the panhandle in particular, [Ex-GOP Rep.] Matt Gaetz's district has the military presence, but also so culturally conservative –– you know, we often joke about it being lower Alabama. I mean, this is this is a culturally conservative national security military, veterans-based district and that district moved by about 17 points."

"So the math is pretty simple here," he elaborated. "If we saw Democratic districts in Florida move 15, 16, 17 points, imagine now if you're an incumbent Republican and a five-point seat, a four-point seat, a six-point seat. You're terrified. And you know, that's about 30 to 40 members of Congress right now, because now they're coming for you next."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'We’d like to put this chapter behind us': Tech execs having regrets about backing Trump

Tech executives and Silicon Valley insiders are having second thoughts about placing all of their chips on Donald Trump in the 2024 election, betting he would be great for the industry and are now discovering otherwise.

According to a report from the Washington Post, there was great hope that the president's plan to gut regulations and shy away from anti-trust lawsuits would be a boon to the technology sector but, after 75 days in office, his reliance on tariffs has impacted not only their complex manufacturing capabilities but has also had a devastating effect on their stock values.

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CNN's Scott Jennings schooled on Elon Musk's slide into becoming 'political poison'

A discussion on CNN's "Table for Five" about the growing unpopularity of Elon Musk, led one panelist to straighten out conservative Scott Jennings who claimed the seemingly ever-present billionaire lost favor with liberals when he threw in his lot with Donald Trump.

With the segment devoted to the question of whether Musk has become "political poison" as evidenced by the loss this past week of a shot at a Wisconsin state Supreme Court seat that Musk threw his support and a reported $26 million at, Jennings suggested the billionaire is being unfairly maligned.

After stating that he thought every on the panel was "dramatically over-reading the results" in Wisconsin," he added, "He's a great entrepreneur. I think his companies and he personally are getting all sorts of negative attention and even vandalism and all these violent attacks, and it's terrible. I know personally that he's been getting death threats, all for the sin, all for the sin, of having been a liberal who decided to support Donald Trump and then go serve in his government for a short period of time."

ALSO READ: ‘I miss lynch mobs’: The secretary of retribution's followers are getting impatient

"It's outrageous," he emphasized.

That led podcaster, Van Lathan, host of "Higher Learning," to push back.

"It's actually not true," he began. "I just want to say something real quick. I understand it, a lot of people want to frame this as people started to hate Elon Musk or not like Elon Musk once Elon Musk decided to support Donald Trump –– it's just not true."

"I definitely think it's true," Jennings protested.

"It's definitely not true.," Lathan shot back. "It started long before then when Elon Musk bought Twitter. Hate speech just erupted on Twitter. Elon Musk's flirting with Naziism and far-right type of stuff for a couple of years before this, has made –– has gotten people off the Elon Musk bandwagon way before he decided to ––."

"I think chronologically that is accurate," CNN host Abby Phillip interjected.

After some overtalk, Phillip continued, "I don't think it's solely about Donald Trump. I think it is, to Van's point that he has been, even before he owned Twitter, actually before he bought it, before he wanted to buy it, he was turning his personal platform into a place where conspiracy theories, harassment. He accused a random person of pedophilia and was sued for it. I mean, like, this was happening years ago before all of this."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Did you anticipate this?' Trump adviser put on the spot over tariff financial chaos

Donald Trump's Senior Counselor for Trade, Peter Navarro, faced a blizzard of questions on CNN on Saturday morning as he attempted to put a happy face on the president's trade war with the rest of the world.

Speaking with host Michael Smerconish, the Trump insider was put on the spot over the wreckage on Wall Street as the Dow Jones slid downward over 4,000 points since Navarro's boss announced his sweeping tariff plan.

During the animated back and forth, the CNN host held up the front page of the New York Times which proclaimed that Trump's tariffs "send markets reeling," which seemed to exasperate Navarro.

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

"I'm holding up the front page of the New York Times today with all the downward trajectory," the CNN host prompted his guest. "And I simply want to know, did you anticipate this? If I had been with you 2 or 3 days ago at the announcement in the Rose Garden, would you have expected that on Saturday morning, it would all, as I said, have hit the fan to this extent?"

"It hasn't hit the fan!" Navarro insisted. "Look, sure, what we're having is going to be a restructuring and a repricing of companies, that's a given. I mean, it's a given. But what's also a given ––."

"So you knew this would happen?" Smerconish interrupted.

"What's 'this' you're referring to?" the Trump adviser argued. "We knew that markets were going to adjust to the bond market ––."

"I'm referring to the S&P 500 bottom falling out in one week," Smerconish shot back.

"Okay, so let's let's level set here for the American people," the clearly exasperated Trump advisor replied. "And this would be a great poll question: do you think the world is treating the United States and its manufacturing base fairly? The problem we're trying to deal here with, and I would love to see the New York Times put up a front page on this is a national emergency associated with a $1.2 trillion annual trade deficit. that is the result of systematically higher tariffs and non-tariff barriers, which are institutionalized by the World Trade Organization."

"That's what we're up against, Michael," he exclaimed. "We've transferred. $18 trillion of wealth into foreign hands since China joined the WTO in 2001. $18 trillion –– that's two thirds of our annual GDP in 2024."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'It won't be easy': Trump scrambles to defend tariff chaos with plea for patience

The day after Wall Street was once again sent into a sell-off frenzy over fears of Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs announcement earlier in the week, the president took to his Truth Social platform to try and calm nerves while at the same time admitting there will be tough times ahead.

With reports noting Wall Street has lost $11 trillion in value since Trump was inaugurated, with $6 trillion gone in the past 48 hours, the president claimed, without evidence, that things are worse for China.

On Truth Social, he wrote, "China has been hit much harder than the USA, not even close. They, and many other nations, have treated us unsustainably badly. We have been the dumb and helpless 'whipping post,' but not any longer."

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

He then added, "We are bringing back jobs and businesses like never before. Already, more than FIVE TRILLION DOLLARS OF INVESTMENT, and rising fast! THIS IS AN ECONOMIC REVOLUTION, AND WE WILL WIN."

"HANG TOUGH, it won’t be easy, but the end result will be historic," he cautioned. "We will, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!"

You can see his post here.

Trump has been 'worse than Covid' after only 75 days: ex-GOP lawmaker

Reacting to the economic chaos Donald Trump has set in motion with his decision to institute sweeping international tariffs that have had a devastating effect on the stock market, a former Republican member of the House compared the president to the Covid pandemic.

Appearing on MSNBC on Saturday morning, ex-Rep Dave Jolly (R-FL) attempted to put into perspective the economic damage the re-elected Trump has already done –– long before he has reached the 100-day mark of his second term.

Speaking with "The Weekend" co-host Michael Steele, the former head of the Republican National Committee, Jolly explained, "Let's start with a snapshot in time, a real statistic measurable by consumer confidence. Donald Trump has had a greater impact on economic uncertainty than Covid -9 did –– think about that? In a matter of 75 days, Donald Trump has proven worse than Covid for economic uncertainty. That's your buddy."

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

He then added, "That's families across the country. Those are consumers, low income, high income, wherever they are and I think what's fascinating with this issue, that we may not see with others in the same way, I agree with [California Democratic Rep] Robert Garcia, there's a latency to this where it's going to get much worse."

He later added, "I'm not sure Donald Trump realizes that the world economy may not need the United States of America in 2025. In the past, in trade wars, we were the heavyweight where maybe we knew we could win. I'm not sure we win this trade war."

"There is a good possibility that Donald Trump just launched a trade war that doesn't just cool off, doesn't just return back to baseline, but a trade war that the United States loses," he added. "And it is because of his ignorance, but also because of his vanity that he has gotten us into this. I don't know how he gets us out of it, truly."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Unhappy' Trump was blindsided by Elon Musk's Pentagon plans: report

A meeting Elon Musk scheduled with Pentagon officials in March was scheduled without Donald Trump's knowledge causing friction between the two, reports the Wall Street Journal.

As part of a deep dive into the relationship between the tech billionaire and the president that Musk had a large hand in getting re-elected, the Journal's Josh Dawsey, Annie Linskey, Brian Schwartz and Dana Mattioli report that tensions within the White House between Musk and staffers led the president to instruct chief of staff Susie Wiles to take control of the situation.

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Trump's global tariff takes effect in dramatic US trade shift

US President Donald Trump's widest-ranging tariffs to date took effect Saturday, in a move which could trigger retaliation and escalating trade tensions that could upset the global economy.

A 10 percent "baseline" tariff came into place past midnight, hitting most US imports except goods from Mexico and Canada as Trump invoked emergency economic powers to address perceived problems with the country's trade deficits.

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America's passion for tariffs rarely pays off, economists warn

Long before Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" announcement, the United States had toyed with imposing high tariffs throughout its history, with inconclusive -- and sometimes catastrophic -- results.

"We have a 20th century president in a 21st century economy who wants to take us back to the 19th century," Dartmouth College economics professor Douglas Irwin posted on X.

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