US News

'Move on': Americans urged to dump their MAGA relatives

New York Magazine senior writer Sarah Jones says when people shun their relatives over politics, it’s not always about protest. Sometimes it’s about personal comfort, or even taste—and that’s okay.

“Young adults are going no-contact with parents and other relatives, often because of politics,” writes Jones.

Keep reading... Show less

Media ignores 'crisis' as Trump slides further into 'cognitive decline': analysis

MSNBC Columnist Michael A. Cohen says it’s past time to reconsider President Donald Trump’s emerging mental illness.

“Right now, as we speak, the president of the United States is showing substantial … public evidence of possible cognitive decline,” writes Cohen. “Trump at times is unaware of what is happening inside his administration, can seem clueless about major policy events, and doesn’t always appear to understand the very legislation that he is promoting.”

Keep reading... Show less

'They want it all': DOJ sparks election fears by demanding voter data from 9 states

The U.S. Department of Justice is seeking the voter registration lists of several states — representing data on millions of Americans — and other election information ahead of the 2026 midterms, raising fears about how the Trump administration plans to use the information.

The DOJ is also demanding Colorado turn over all records related to the 2024 election, a massive trove of documents that could include ballots and even voting equipment. The Colorado inquiry, the most sweeping publicly known request, underscores the extent of the administration’s attention on state election activities.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump hosted party for 'young women' where Epstein was the only guest: New York Times

Donald Trump once hosted a party featuring "young women" where Jeffrey Epstein "was the only other guest," the New York Times reported over the weekend.

In an article titled "Inside the Long Friendship Between Trump and Epstein," Alan Feuer and Matthew Goldstein write that, "For nearly 15 years, the two men socialized together in Manhattan and Palm Beach, Fla., before a falling out that preceded Mr. Epstein’s first arrest."

Keep reading... Show less

'Thugs': Trump floats 'prosecuting Obama' as president spirals from latest scandal

Donald Trump on Saturday seemed to show enthusiasm for "prosecuting Obama" as the president is reeling from the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.

The president took to his own social media site over the weekend, first to pressure a GOP leader and then to highlight a Fox News panel all about the former president.

Keep reading... Show less

'We need them badly!' Trump pressures John Thune to skip vacation to confirm nominees

Donald Trump on Saturday applied some pressure to Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD).

Specifically, the president took to his own social media site, Truth Social, to beg Thune to do whatever is needed to confirm Trump's picks.

Keep reading... Show less

'Trump advisers are aghast' as admin's latest move dooms GOP's midterm chances: Wired

Donald Trump's administration's mishandling the of the Jeffrey Epstein scandal could doom the GOP's efforts in the upcoming midterm elections, according to a reporter.

Jake Lahut of Wired appeared on MSNBC on Saturday, and was asked about his recent reporting on the MAGA blow-up in response to the Epstein controversy.

Keep reading... Show less

'Donald told me': Trump's biographer spills new details on 'deeper' Epstein relationship

Donald Trump once told his biographer about the depth of his relationship with disgraced financier and convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

Tim O'Brien, who spent massive amounts of time with Trump before writing TrumpNation: The Art of Being the Donald, appeared on MSNBC on Saturday to discuss Trump's recent Epstein scandal.

Keep reading... Show less

'I've got news for them': Jasmine Crockett says GOP plan set for 'unprecedented backfire'

Republicans' new plan is going to "backfire in a really unprecedented way," Democratic lawmaker Jasmine Crockett said.

The GOP in Texas is working to gerrymander the state even further in favor of the conservative party, but it's probably not going to work, according to Crockett on Saturday.

Keep reading... Show less

'I don't think it does end': GOP insider says Epstein 'is gonna dog Trump for a long time'

Donald Trump may be dealing with the Jeffrey Epstein scandal for "a long time," according to a Republican insider Saturday.

GOP strategist Brendan Buck appeared on MSNBC over the weekend, where he was asked the question being pondered by political analysts around the country: how long will Trump be bogged down by the Epstein controversy.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump’s ‘next-level’ freak-out over WSJ report ‘doesn’t pass the smell test:’ Insider

President Donald Trump’s “emotional reaction” to the bombshell report from the Wall Street Journal has reached heights never seen before during either of his two terms, argued former advisor to House Speaker John Boehner, Maura Gillespie, who called the president’s response to his increasingly frustrated base “visceral” and “next level.”

The Wall Street Journal published a bombshell report this week revealing new details about Trump’s relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, alleged to have operated a blackmail operation targeting powerful individuals. Trump’s response has been fierce, immediately launching a $10 billion lawsuit against the publication, and insulting many of his own supporters as "stupid" who continue to promote theories around Epstein.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump is left hanging by the DOJ as he fends off Wall Street Journal report: legal expert

President Donald Trump’s fury over a report on a letter he allegedly sent Jeffrey Epstein is largely motivated by his knowledge that the letter is already in possession of the Justice Department, former Palm Beach state attorney Dave Aronberg argued Saturday.

Add to that, top officials in the Department of Justice (DOJ) has been oddly silent over the existence of the contested letter.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's 'increasing disconnect from reality' is back with a vengeance: analyst

A long rambling story Donald Trump told about his uncle this week, none of which was true, has raised fresh alarms that his advanced age and the pressures of the job appear to have him trapped in a downward spiral.

Speaking at a technology summit in Pittsburgh this week, the president told that crowd that his uncle John, a former professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), taught Ted Kaczynski –– better known as the Unabomber.

That would have been difficult since, as MSNBC's Michael A. Cohen wrote, "John Trump passed away in 1985. Kaczynski committed bombings that killed three people and wounded nearly two dozen others from 1978 to 1995. He was finally arrested in 1996 and sentenced to life in prison in 1998. If both the president and his uncle knew that Kaczynski was the Unabomber more than a decade before his arrest ... now that would be a story!"

Combined with President Trump pinning blame on ex-President Joe Biden for the appointment of Jerome Powell to the Fed, when Trump was responsible, the MSNBC analyst expressed alarm that Trump is still repeating the debunked stories with gusto as he becomes even more detached from facts.

"Trump’s Unabomber tale is yet another example of the what can feel like an increasing disconnect from reality. Yet, as with so many of Trump’s recent and unsettling statements, too many in the mainstream media seem uninterested in covering the story, " Cohen wrote.

He then cautioned, "Right now, as we speak, the president of the United States is showing substantial, arguably greater public evidence of possible cognitive decline. Trump at times is unaware of what is happening inside his administration, can seem clueless about major policy events, and doesn’t always appear to understand the very legislation that he is promoting."

He added that press is ignoring what is right in front of their faces, after a steady diet of stories about ex-President Joe Biden's decline.

"One can certainly debate the extent to which Biden was truly experiencing cognitive decline. But if reporters are going to argue that the media dropped the ball in not giving that story greater coverage, then how does one explain not even talking about what is happening right now?" he asked.

You can read more here.