Trump News

'Stunning': Conservative NYT columnist says Hegseth would resign if he had 'any honor'

The fallout from The Atlantic’s stunning report that revealed top secret war plans were shared with a reporter in a Signal group chat is just beginning but the calls for Pete Hegseth to resign are already starting to flow in.

That includes conservative New York Times columnist David French, who told readers in an opinion piece on Monday that as a result of the ordeal, the Pentagon chief has “blown his credibility as a military leader.”

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'Take responsibility': Trump official dressed down by senator amid 'cavalier attitude'

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has no one to blame but himself for the serious leak of highly classified military information, Sen. Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) said on CNN's "OutFront" — and he has to acknowledge the buck stops with him.

The Trump White House was plunged into turmoil and finger-pointing on Monday after it was revealed that Hegseth disclosed specific plans detailing where and how the U.S. could initiate and attack in a group chat on Signal that included not only a number of national security officials who should know better, but a reporter as well.

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‘Who exactly is running the government?’ Trump’s war plans leak denial backfires

President Donald Trump’s claim that he was unaware of a cabinet-level breach of classified information—an incident reportedly involving up to 18 top national security officials discussing sensitive details of a planned military strike—appears to have backfired, raising questions about his knowledge of the actions of his top officials, and, as Commander-in-Chief, his knowledge of U.S. national security and military operations.

The Atlantic’s editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, revealed Monday afternoon that he inadvertently had been included in the 18-person group chat on the unclassified messaging app Signal. Experts say those discussions should never have been held over the app, but rather inside a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility, or inside multiple SCIFs.

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'Nazis got better treatment,' judge says of Trump admin deportations

by Chris Lefkow

A federal judge on Monday sharply criticized the Trump administration's summary deportation of alleged Venezuelan gang members, saying "Nazis got better treatment" from the United States during World War II.

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Trump to impose sharp tariff on countries buying Venezuelan oil

by Beiyi SEOW and Becca MILFELD

US President Donald Trump announced Monday steep tariffs on imports from countries buying Venezuelan oil and gas, a punitive measure that could hit China and India, among others, and sow fresh global trade uncertainty.

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Trump admin sent journalist classified US plan for Yemen strikes

by Aurélia END

A US journalist was inadvertently included in a group chat in which Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Vice President JD Vance and other top American officials discussed upcoming strikes against Yemen's Huthi rebels, the White House confirmed Monday.

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'False teacher': Conservative Christians turn on Trump's spiritual adviser

Some conservative Christians are unhappy with the leadership of Donald Trump's new White House Faith Office, which was established through the same executive order directing the Department of Justice to prosecute alleged cases of "anti-Christian bias."

The president put his longtime spiritual adviser Paula White-Cain in charge of the Faith Office to assist Attorney General Pam Bondi in pursuing those cases and protecting religious liberties, but some conservative Christians say the administration has failed to protect religious charity groups from its government funding cuts, reported NOTUS.

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'Overplayed his cards — big time': Experts warn Trump latest 'aggressive' move backfires

President Donald Trump's obsession with acquiring Greenland from Denmark appears to be blowing up in his face, The New York Times reported on Monday.

"His decision, announced this weekend, to send a high-powered U.S. delegation to the island, apparently uninvited, is already backfiring," wrote Jeffrey Gettleman and Maya Tekeli. "The administration tried to present it as a friendly trip, saying that Usha Vance, the wife of Vice President JD Vance, would attend a dogsled race this week with one of their sons and that Michael Waltz, the national security adviser, would tour an American military base."

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Colorado takes down Trump portrait after president bemoans it was 'purposefully distorted'

A portrait of President Donald Trump hanging in the Colorado state capitol will be removed after he complained it was "purposefully distorted."

Artist Sarah Boardman painted the portrait during the first Trump term, and it was unveiled in 2019, The Associated Press reported. The Colorado Republican Party raised more than $10,000 on GoFundMe to commission an oil painting of Trump for the Capitol.

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'Secretly panicking': GOP strategists fear Musk is leading Trump off a cliff

GOP strategists are "secretly panicking" that tech billionaire Elon Musk is leading President Donald Trump down a path to electoral ruin, Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling wrote in an analysis for The New Republic published on Monday.

Polling has shown that even a lot of voters who like Trump are souring on Musk as he uses his Department of Government Efficiency initiative to force sweeping and often extralegal cuts to the civil service and vital government programs.

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Head of US Postal Service resigns amid fears of privatization: report

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy has resigned, TIME Magazine reported Monday afternoon.

In an exclusive report, TIME noted, "DeJoy’s departure comes weeks after he struck an agreement to allow Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to help the agency cut costs and remove bureaucratic red tape."

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'You have got to be kidding': Hillary Clinton livid as Trump admin. leaks secret war plans

A bombshell report in The Atlantic revealed that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth shared classified war plans in a Signal chat that included a reporter among its membership — and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had thoughts on the eye-popping report.

Taking to X on Monday, Clinton posted, "You have got to be kidding me."

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'These people can't keep America safe': Buttigieg drops profanity over war plan blunder

Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Monday delivered an expletive-laced reaction to reports that highly sensitive war plans were shared with a journalist who was somehow added to a Signal chat group of defense officials.

The colossal error was revealed by Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, who wrote Monday of his inadvertent inclusion in the messaging app where war plans about an imminent strike on Yemen were discussed among high-level Trump administration officials.

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