Trump News

'I don't like being threatened': 'The View' hosts ask 'how long' before they're silenced

On Tuesday, the co-hosts of "The View" told their audience that if they disappear from the air, it will be because they have lost their right to free speech.

Whoopi Goldberg expressed her concern about those being targeted or silenced for disagreeing with the administration.

Keep reading... Show less

'Finally told the truth': GOP senator mistakenly admits he wants to 'cut Medicare'

Rep. Katherine Clark (D-MA), the House minority whip, called out Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) after he accidentally admitted Republicans want to "cut Medicare."

During a Tuesday interview on CNBC, Cassidy was asked how Republicans would pay for the trillions of dollars in tax cuts that President Donald Trump has demanded.

Keep reading... Show less

'Never': Chair of Joint Chiefs nominee accuses Trump of mistake over MAGA hat story

Lt. Gen. Dan "Razin" Caine, the nominee for the Joint Chiefs chair, insisted that Donald Trump was not talking about him when the now president told a story about the general violating military protocol by donning a red MAGA hat.

Trump made the claim about his choice for top military adviser at last year's CPAC event.

Keep reading... Show less

'Looking for an escape valve': Ex-GOP aide claims Musk is being set up as Trump fall guy

Maura Gillespie, a former deputy chief of staff for ex-Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), told CNN on Tuesday that it sounds like President Donald Trump is getting antsy to shove billionaire Elon Musk out the door.

During a segment about Musk's controversial tenure as head of the Department of Government Efficiency, host Kate Bolduan pointed out that Trump this week told reporters that he thought Musk was "amazing" before adding that "I also think he's got a big company to run, and so at some point, he's going to be going back."

Keep reading... Show less

WH Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt says she fights 'spiritual warfare' and 'evil forces'

Karoline Leavitt said part of her job as White House secretary is to fight "spiritual warfare" as "evil forces" try to detail President Donald Trump's agenda.

In an interview with CBN's David Brody, Leavitt insisted she couldn't give into negativity at White House briefings, so she holds prayer services before the events.

Keep reading... Show less

'Horrific': Uproar as Trump lawyers admit they deported innocent man to 'torture dungeon'

The Trump administration admitted in court documents this week that it accidentally deported an immigrant father in Maryland with protected legal status to an infamous megaprison in El Salvador, despite him not having any sort of criminal record, reported The Atlantic.

A lawyer for Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who had been accused in 2019 of being a gang member with MS-13 by a police informant but had successfully defended his innocence after a stint in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody, said that he has never heard of any other situation in which the government knowingly deported a man with protected status.

Keep reading... Show less

'Hold up!' Election denier shut down live on CNN as she veers into conspiracy theory

An election denier was silenced late Monday as she veered into a conspiracy theory live on CNN — and was immediately shut down.

Host Abby Phillip had been discussing President Donald Trump’s suggestion over the weekend that he was seriously considering running for a third term — a move that would violate the U.S. Constitution.

Keep reading... Show less

'Not seen more wrongheaded policy': Expert says Trump move was discredited 200 years ago

The Washington Post is reporting that President Donald Trump's aides "have drafted a proposal to impose tariffs of around 20 percent on most imports to the United States," which many prominent economists have argued would almost certainly push the United States into a recession.

Greg Mankiw, an economics professor at Harvard University and a former Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers under President George W. Bush, said that the tariff proposal being floated by the president indicated a deep-seated ignorance of how economies actually operate.

Keep reading... Show less

'Claim to infamy': Economist warns Trump he's about to set historic first he'll regret

Labor economist Kathryn Anne Edwards believes that President Donald Trump is poised to make history with his global trade wars, but not the kind of history he will want to be remembered for.

Writing in Bloomberg, Edwards argued that the United States economy is "plodding toward a recession" and that "this will arguably be the only recession directly caused by White House policy."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump says he’ll stop health care fraudsters. Last time, he let them walk.

Five years ago, the CEO of one of the largest pain clinic companies in the Southeast was sentenced to more than three years in prison after being convicted in a $4 million illegal kickback scheme.

But after just four months behind bars, John Estin Davis walked free. President Donald Trump commuted Davis’ sentence in the last days of his first term. In a statement explaining the decision, the White House said that “no one suffered financially” from Davis’ crime.

Keep reading... Show less

‘Beautiful thing’: Some House Republicans secretly long for special elections 'massacre'

A pair of House Republicans told Politico they’re longing for their party to get a bloody eye in crucial elections in Florida and Wisconsin Tuesday.

The two, who were not named by the magazine, are longing for bruising defeats — or at least close calls in the Florida votes — as a way to shore up their party's future in the midterms.

Keep reading... Show less

'Profoundly dangerous': MSNBC's Rachel Maddow unloads on Trump for latest 'cruel' attack

Rachel Maddow was all over what she called an “inadvertently hilarious press release” issued by the Trump administration that attempted to clean up plans to close dozens of Social Security offices across the country — which the MSNBC host spent her opening monologue blatantly mocking.

Maddow spent the first half of her show on Monday highlighting the growing protests to various Trump administration policies nationwide, including cuts to government personnel and programs, which she credited for creating pressure against their actions.

Keep reading... Show less

'Grave sign': Yale scholar delivers 'warning' before fleeing 'fascist dictatorship'

Jason Stanley, a Yale University professor and author known for his expertise on the history of fascism, recently made a bombshell announcement: He is leaving the United States and moving to Canada.

Stanley, author of the 2018 book, "How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them," accepted a job offer at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy. And he is being candid about his reasons for leaving the country: Stanley believes the U.S. is moving in an increasingly authoritarian direction during Donald Trump's second presidency.

Keep reading... Show less