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Despairing Trump now hoping to survive 'the purge to come': Opinion

President Donald Trump was lauding his newly renovated but controversial luxury plane gifted him by the Qatari royal family on Friday. The president presented the plane as the new Air Force One, despite allegations of corruption surrounding the gift, and the fact that Trump treats the plane as a personal gift and has no plan to leave it in the possession of the president who replaces him. But he added that he intends to paint all of the planes in the fleet air force to look just like the new Qatari donation, making this just one more attempt by Trump to mark everything around him with his personal stamp or influence.

However, John Heilemann, Chief Political Columnist for the media company Puck says there is a reason Trump is desperate to mark every taxpayer-funded thing around him as his personal [property.

“He's obviously … into the notion of trying to build monuments to himself in various ways and to leave marks that he thinks will not be will not be able to go away, like to kind of build the arch to Trump, you know, change the reflecting pool, change the [White House] east wing, install the claw and leave it there over the White House forever,” Heilemann told MS NOW anchor Nicole Wallace. “I mean, Trump is pretty dumb sometimes, but I think he knows some of these things are more transitory than others, easier to tear down. But I think all of it reflects a sense that he recognizes, on some basic level, that that project of exorcising Donald Trump … getting rid of the [stain] of Donald Trump is going to be a big project for the Democrat who gets back in the White House.”

Heilemann said this labor will doubtless be in addition to the work require to restore American democracy and rebuild national institutions.

“You saw it when they took the Trump name down from the Kennedy center. That was a big moment for people. I think you're going to see a lot of that — and Trump knows that,” Heilemann said. “So … if he changes a whole lot of stuff, he probably thinks some aspects of him, some markings that he leaves, some bird droppings of his, will somehow survive the purge to come.”

Wallace said she predicted that, other than rebuilding the east wing, the next administration to “wash away the [Trum] spot pretty darn quickly. “

“I think it's going to be a giant national steam cleaning of everything he's touched,” confirmed Heilemann. “So it's going to be like, ‘okay, let's get in here, clean it all, scrub it all out.’

“And the gold,” quipped Wallace, referring to Trump’s overwrought White House slapped with gold paint. “I mean, I don't know who's going to be in charge of prying all that stuff off the walls.”

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White House turns on 'moron' MAGA loyalist who crossed Trump

The Trump White House is attacking one of its loyal media figures after she berated Vice President JD Vance over President Donald Trump’s Iran deal.

“The problem is, that it’s an absolutely disastrous deal that has brought us to our knees, weeks before our 250th birthday,” NewsNation host Batya Ungar-Sargon said in a clip she posted to social media, which Mediaite reported.

“This is an utter humiliation of the United States, and everybody knows it,” she continued. “Everybody knows it, but especially Iran knows it. They are celebrating this. They are still calling us the enemy.”

“And while Iran celebrates this and sneers at us for totally capitulating when we had complete military superiority over them,” she said, “JD Vance is out there criticizing Israel, making up fantasies about how it is Israel’s fault, and Israel wants Iran to be a failed state. And if only Israel would lay down its arms and allow Hezbollah to keep attacking it, there would be peace in the Middle East.”

Ungar-Sargon called Vance’s remarks “disgusting,” “utterly deplorable,” and a “complete Tucker Carlsonification of the Vice President of the United States.”

She warned, “if this was a dry run for Vance 2028,” for president, “we sure learned a lot.”

On social media, Ungar-Sargon added: “VP JD Vance just brought the US to its knees with a humiliating deal weeks before our 250th birthday and he has the audacity to blame … Israel! … for the terrible situation we’re in.”

The White House’s Rapid Response team blasted Ungar-Sargon.

“The only humiliation here is Batya desperately begging for an additional brain cell because her failing TV … show is even more irrelevant than the likes of Kaitlan Collins and Fake Tapper,” the White House declared. “Only a moron of her caliber could still doubt President Trump’s leadership.”

In 2024, Ungar-Sargon wrote, “American Jews should vote for Trump because he is the candidate who stands most clearly for the things that have defined us for centuries.”

Strategist exposes how 'delusional' Trump got himself neutered

Political commentator Jonah Goldberg issued a rhetorical body-slam about President Donald Trump's recent claim that there are "no limits" to his power.

Marc Caputo recently asked Trump, " What have you learned about not just the exercise of power, but the limits on your power as a result of the conflict?"

"There are no limits. No, not — I haven't learned that lesson yet. I know there are. But you know, there are no limits. We defeated them totally militarily," Trump said about Iran, his agreement, and what he calls "an unconditional defeat."

It comes at a time when Trump insulted Premier Giorgia Meloni, claiming Meloni "begged" him for a photo and he "felt sorry for her." That mistake prompted Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani to abruptly cancel his planned trip to the U.S. Meloni also responded with a video, making it clear that his claim was not true but that “Italy and I do not beg."

Goldberg returned to the Axios interview and merged the two stories together. While Trump was once able to bully his way into foreign policy and make demands of international leaders, the Iran War made it clear that those days are over. Meloni simply vocalized it publicly.

"Where he says, we totally defeated Iran militarily. There are no limits to my power to my power.' The fact that he's coming out of this week with this deal, saying that there are no limits to his power when he was forced to negotiate ending a blockade to open up the Strait of Hormuz, is preposterous," Goldberg said. "And why was the Strait of Hormuz such a problem? They begged to get allies to come in and help with the mine-sweeping, because our European allies have better equipment for that kind of stuff."

The reason that the Strait is closed is that Trump couldn't get Europe to come to his aid.

"Why couldn't they get them to do it? Because he threatened to take, militarily, take over Greenland, and made himself so unbelievably radioactive," Goldberg continued. "The most brilliant thing Trump did — he was already unpopular in the middle and with the left in Europe. But the Greenland thing made the nationalists hate him, too."

After that, it was implausible that any European allies would help at Trump's demand.

"The idea that all these allies were going to jump and help him out in the Strait of Hormuz. It would be political suicide for any elected leader in Europe to act to save Trump's bacon about anything," Goldberg said.

"I think his approval rating in Denmark is like 4 percent, right? So like, those are limits to his power," Goldberg explained. "We would be a much more powerful country if we had allies that were willing to get our back and help us out. Those are limits. What's disturbing is he's so delusional he can't see the limits to his power, and that's something that's going to get him into more mistakes."


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Critics tear apart Trump after he claims his presidential powers have 'no limits'

During an interview with Axios' Marc Caputo, U.S. President Donald Trump discussed his ceasefire deal with Iran. Caputo asked Trump about the "limits" on his power, and his response is generating a lot of discussion on social media — some of it quite negative.

Caputo asked Trump, "What have you learned about not just the exercise of power, but the limits of your power, as a result of the conflict?"

The U.S. president responded, "There are no limits. No, none. I haven't learned that lesson yet. I know there are."

The liberal group Call to Activism, started by activist Joe Gallina, found the "no limits" disturbing.

"This should frighten us all," Call to Activism warned on X.

Journalist Jeff Yang tweeted, "Through a series of blunders, Trump's ability to govern has been severely weakened. He is becoming a de facto lame duck even in his second year in office. Bragging about his unlimited power is mere swanking to hide his incapacitated status."

Gregory Haynes, CEO of Point of Success Workforce Solutions, posted, "Had Obama or Biden said this RW media & Republicans would be out in the streets with 'Pitchforks and Torches.' And they would be RIGHT to do so. No President who took an Oath to …Preserve,Protect and Defend the Constitution of the United States, should be saying that there are no limits to his power."

The conservative group Republicans Against Trump noted that when Caputo said Trump's Iran deal "doesn't look like unconditional surrender," he responded, "Well, it really probably is unconditional surrender."

X user Peter Toolan commented, "Remind the @POTUS we still have checks and balances regardless if you want to be king."

Another X user, Amma Opoku, wrote, "He lives in Cloud cuckoo land… he lies…. He just can’t help himself and I just wonder whether he has a best friend in his life who will tell him the truth and say to him look you gotta stop lying . Why doesn’t his wife or his children say anything. It’s baffling to me."

Former Republican Debi Ganster argued, "Republicans are responsible for this. They gave up their own power and turned it over to him. Remove every single one of them."



Trump’s algae 'embarrassment' ripped apart as Iran comparison takes on new meaning

CNN kicked off its morning show discussions talking about the epic failure that President Donald Trump's Reflecting Pool project has become.

There are ongoing questions about whether the algae can be fully removed, and now it appears the $14 million paint job is peeling off in chunks. The U.S. Department of the Interior continues to insist that the water is perfectly clear and everything is fine. Those visiting have filmed something entirely different.

Two companies were responsible for the project that cost nearly $16 million: Greenwater Services, an Ohio company, and Virginia-based Atlantic Industrial Coatings, which was responsible for the paint that is now peeling off in chunks.

"First of all, the fact that it was called Greenwater should have been a giveaway. I'm just saying you can't make that up. Sorry," quipped New York Times reporter Lulu Garcia Navarro.

The Dispatch's politics editor, Michael Warren, called the ordeal "thoroughly predictable."

The issue has been a long-standing problem for the reflecting pool.

"These algae blooms happen because there just isn't enough water flow out of it. And I do think that, you know, two weeks ago, a week ago on social media, you had all these kind of supporters of the president, Republicans, saying finally the president is cleaning this up," he added.

The U.S. Department of the Interior compared it to Trump's success in Iran. At the same time that CNN was reporting the reflecting pool failure, it was also revealed that the signing of the Iran deal was on hold again.

"It was just it was obvious that this was going this was very likely to happen," said Warren.

Former federal prosecutor and CNN legal analyst Elliot Williams noted, "Perhaps there ... could have been a benefit to it. Once again, it is Trump, and the folks around him making the case aggressively before it — almost as a moral matter. And that when it goes badly now, sort of it's —"

Host Audie Cornish cut him off, agreeing that it has become a metaphor for the Trump administration as a whole for the "clean-up of Washington." Further, it is indicative of the promises that Trump made during the 2024 campaign and his continued failure to deliver on issues like lower gas prices, lower inflation, affordable living and groceries, cutting $2 trillion from the federal budget and a slew of other things.

ABC News reporter Jonathan Karl compared the pool peeling to the back of Trump's hand.

"Well, now it has cost a lot of money," Cornish said. She played a clip of Trump promising that the project would cost $1.9 million. Trump also promised that his ballroom would only cost $200 million and he would raise the funds for all of it. That has now ballooned to $600 million and Trump was only able to raise half of it.

"You see, that's the point I'm making," Williams agreed. "He went so far out there making the case as to how quickly it was going to happen, how cheaply it would be done and how perfect it would be," Williams continued. "That's what could have been an honest problem of maybe a piece chipped off. People have been in a swimming pool [they] know that that happens from time to time. What could have been a simple problem now becomes an embarrassment."

Cornish said that the Department of the Interior was the one that made the unfortunate mistake of comparing the pool to the Iran war and now it's clear that both have become failures.

"And so now they're able to say, oh, really? A thing no one asked for has gone wrong, costing us way more than we expected. And you're trying to do a cleanup? Sounds familiar. And it was like the messaging," said Cornish.

"The internet is undefeated," Garcia Navarro quipped. " I mean, there is so many jokes about this. There's like the Rothko joke because of the peroxide."

Lawmakers fear Trump’s new intel chief 'could weaken American national security'

President Donald Trump's new intelligence community chief came into his appointed post ready to fire people, CNN reported Friday morning.

Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency Bill Pulte has now also taken over as director of national intelligence and began "asking for a list of every employee in the office so he could assess whether to fire them," CNN reported on Friday morning, citing two sources familiar with the matter. He wants to eliminate hundreds of jobs and he wants to do it quickly.

Outgoing Director Tulsi Gabbard didn't even know Pulte was showing up until she got a brief heads-up.

The report said that he met with lawyers and staff during the day.

Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.) told CNN on Friday morning that the last thing someone does is go into work on their first day and start firing people. It's prompting a lot of concern from him that Pulte "could weaken America's national security."

CNN host Sara Sidner asked whether DOGE, Elon Musk's failed project to eliminate $2 trillion from the federal budget, had already done the firings.

"It did," said Juliette Kayyem, CNN's senior national security analyst and ex-assistant secretary of Homeland Security.

"Look, Bill Pulte is there for one reason, and that is to satisfy the president's agenda of politicizing the intelligence community," she continued. "And that is so we'll look at sort of, you know, his notions of — well, the presidents' notions of election fraud in various elections. I want to say, just it's not a personal opinion: by statute, Bill Pulte is not qualified for this position. The Director of National Intelligence is supposed to come from the intelligence community. Bill Pulte is a businessman with strong ties to MAGA and to Trump."

Pulte has never held a job in national security or intelligence.

Kayyem said that the only reason that Pulte is in the post is to "go after the president's political critics and perceived political enemies."

Another shocking revelation came when Pulte asked whether "he could bring the President’s Daily Brief to his house, raising alarm bells among intelligence officials," one source told CNN.

The top briefing book is highly classified. A "second source pushed back on this characterization, noting that the PDB is provided electronically," the report added.

CNN also reported that Pulte wanted to know his level of security clearance. As the top intelligence official, he would have the top intelligence clearance. He also wondered if he had access to his own government plane.

These were the questions Pulte had in a meeting that was supposed to be an explanation of "the core mission of ODNI to Pulte."

Kayyem said that some people tend to look at the ODNI post the way that Trump does, "which is essentially ... is he a friend or not a friend to what Trump wants to do, which is to use the intelligence agencies, all of them, because that's what the DNI oversees to go after political critics and then to go after anyone who might oppose an election threat to the president."

She added that Pulte will politicize the department more than any other previous person in the post.

Sidner called the matter "fascinating to watch all of this happen" because it is coming "from a president who talked so much about the deep state that was against him. And now to me, it seems like he's trying to create the deep state himself."

Brutal CNN supercut shows GOP senators 'up in arms' at Trump’s deal

CNN on Friday aired a supercut of Republican senators criticizing President Donald Trump’s Iran deal, with host Audie Cornish describing leaders as “kind of up in arms” over the president’s Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Iranian regime.

Kurt Volker, an American diplomat and former U.S. ambassador to NATO, joined CNN to discuss the deal, telling Cornish “there's a lot to play out here.”

As Cornish described, “the people who are loudest in their complaints about this deal are Republicans.”

“We're just hearing so many senators saying similar things,” Cornish said before rolling the supercut.

“Everything I've heard about it causes me concern,” Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) said.

“I do have concerns that certain aspects of this deal might be a step in the wrong direction,” Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AK) noted. “I have to know where that money is coming from, because I don't think my constituents are going to be really happy about it, if that's all U.S. taxpayer dollars,” Sen. Joni Earnst told reporters. “History demonstrates that giving billions of dollars to theocratic lunatics who want to murder us is an exceptionally bad idea,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) argued.

“So people are kind of up in arms about many things, but specifically, the $300 billion potential reconstruction and development fund, which is supposed to be an investment fund,” Cornish said. “And Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi is the top Republican. He was saying look, I get that it's not funded by taxpayer dollars but it's still a payoff. And he's saying it's a payoff that would make [Former President Barack] Obama’s 2015 deal look like a pittance by comparison.”

“Yes, that's exactly right,” Volker agreed. "That's the one part of this thing that is the most mystifying at all: Why there's any money changing hands here.” “But they're saying there isn't, right. They're arguing that money isn't changing hands,” Cornish noted.

“Well, they say that, but then you look and you say sanctions are being lifted. Iran is getting oil sales. There will be a reconstruction fund that the gulf states will organize. That's money,” Volker replied.

'It’s not the same thing': Anchor grills GOP lawmaker over support of Iran deal

CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins took Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio) to task over his support of President Donald Trump’s widely panned Memorandum of Understanding, forcing him to defend several of the plan's more outrageous points.

“My point of view is that we have to give peace a chance to get done,” Moreno told Collins. “We have absolutely not made Iran stronger. We've killed almost 80 of their top leaders. We've destroyed their army, their navy, their ballistic missile program. Like I said, they are absolutely in a dramatically worse position as a result of president Trump's actions. And he prevented them from actually using a nuclear weapon that they could have cobbled together.”

“[But] this deal lets them have waivers,” Collins pointed out. “They can start selling oil tonight. Eventually it will potentially unfreeze billions of dollars, hundreds of billions of dollars in frozen assets. Iran is still a state sponsor of terrorism, according to the United States. Do you have an issue with the U.S. doing things that allows them to have money to potentially rebuild all of those things that you just mentioned?”

“What's the alternative, Kaitlan?" Moreno demanded. "What would you want the president to do? Allow them to have built a nuclear weapon?”

“That's a question for some Republicans, too, it sounds like,” said Collins, referring to many GOP critics who find the deal offensive. She also pointed out that Iran now stands “make more money because they're selling it at competitive market prices to buyers with more attractive currencies.”

She also reminded Moreno that he said in April that money from Iran’s oil sales doesn't “go to the people. It goes to a corrupt leadership.”

“Aren't you worried that corrupt leadership is now going to get tens of billions of dollars from these sales?” she asked.

“Yeah, but we'll be watching exactly what they do with the money,” said Moreno.

“But the president pledged not to get involved in their domestic affairs in the MOU that he signed,” Collins quickly countered, to which Moreno could only repeat: “We're going to make certain that they behave, and they do exactly what they need to do.”

Moreno then made a comparison to Trump’s intervention in Venezuela, saying Trump “saved Latin America,” and promised “you’re gonna see that happen in Cuba.”

“It’s not the same thing. You can’t really compare the two,” said Collins, before then asking Moreno about the plight of the Iranian people.

“[Trump] told that Iranian people that this was their chance to rise up and take back their government. Their government is being run by the former leader’s son. Do you think that they have been left hung out to dry here?”

“Look, I don't know what's going to happen there,” said Moreno. “Again. We don't know.”

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Republican torn apart for claiming she hasn’t read Trump's botched deal

President Donald Trump released less than two pages outlining his memorandum of understanding that will be the framework for the ultimate deal with Iran to end the war. While some Republican lawmakers have come out against the deal, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) hasn't even read it.

The 14-point agreement was available nearly 24 hours ago, CNN producer Kit Maher remarked after reporter Manu Raju faced off with Collins outside the members-only elevator.

"I have not reviewed the MOU yet," Collins told reporters. When pressed on whether the war was successful or she thought it was a "good deal," she reiterated, "I have not yet had a chance to read it."

CNN's Aaron Blake remarked, "Collins sits on the Senate Intelligence Committee."

Semafor congressional bureau chief Burgess Everett commented, "'There is high level dismay' among Senate Republicans about the Iran deal, one senator says, adding it’s 'unlikely' that a final deal with Iran is ever reached."

One of Blake's followers thinks that Collins is lying.

"She may SIT on the committee, but there's no intelligence in evidence..." another commented.

A mock account named Art Vandelay suggested that Collins plug the plan into ChatGPT and have it summarize the MOU into five sentences.

A lawyer who previously worked for the Democratic Party called the comments "Embarrassing and disqualifying." He urged Collins, "Do your job or go away."

The X account Collins Watch, which heckles the senator on the social media platform, commented, "You can't just wait for the elevator doors to close when you get an uncomfortable question in the middle of a town hall...which is probably why Susan Collins hasn't held one since the 1990s."

Trump already has a strong opposition force in the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Sen. Roger Wicker, a far-right Republican from Mississippi, made it clear he isn't happy with Trump's MOU and went so far as to blame "ill-advice" that he thinks the president's advisors are giving him.

"Specifically, the $300 billion fund for the reconstruction and economic development of Iran — though not funded by U.S. taxpayers — would make Iran's payoff under President Obama's 2015 deal look like a pittance by comparison. I believe it would be an error to force Israel to stand down against Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed terrorist organization that continues to attack Israel on its northern border," he continued.

Pathologist warns of Trump’s 'observable signs' of rapid 'severe decline'

President Donald Trump appears to be showing "observable signs" of a "severe decline" in a short amount of time, according to one pathologist, who also suggested that the signs might be consistent with a recent stroke, though stopped short of diagnosing.

Hilary Shae is a licensed speech-language pathologist with a specialty in concussion treatments, as well as a political content creator who shares various takes critical of Trump and gives professional examinations of his seemingly deteriorating cognitive and physical health. In one of her latest videos, she suggested that "something has changed" with Trump after noticing numerous worrying signs in clips from his G7 Summit visit.

Firstly, she noted an odd interaction with French President Emmanuel Macron, when it seemed like Trump was unable to hold up his own hand while giving him a handshake. She also argued that he seemed "unable to turn his body" and had "no idea what was going on" at this time. She also noted his "ability to go down stairs" while exiting Air Force One, suggesting that his mobility was worse than usual and seemed to require him to have "singular focus" on the task.

Beyond those points, Shae further explained potential signs of "dysarthria" in Trump's speech. This refers to a condition, typically following a stroke, in which changes in coordination and muscle control can lead to a patient's speech having a "breathiness, misarticulations" and speech that generally sounds more "unintelligible." This, she argued, was noticeable in a clip of Trump speaking at the G7, in addition to odd jaw movements and signs of him having to much saliva in his mouth, causing him to sound more "wet" and smack his lips more often.

Shae also noted signs of respiratory issues in the clip.

"He required such frequent breaths that he had very, very short phrases, and the phrases were not typically on an actual phrase ending," she explained. "They weren't at an appropriate place... It seems like it's breath-related, and part of dysarthria can be the muscle control and coordination for breathing as well."

She asserted that these dysarthria signs were new for Trump, and not things that she has observed in his behavior recently, noting that they were missing when he stormed out of an NBC interview earlier this month.

"All of this, everything that's happened kind of in the beginning of June, tells me that there's been a significant change in the last couple of days," Shae added. "He's been sleeping more frequently... falling asleep at the NBA Finals, falling asleep at the UFC championship."

She added: "And there's one final thing that I want to point out that, while it's somewhat dementia-related, I think it's much worse, it's that he seems to have zero awareness of his surroundings, absolutely none. There just seems to be nothing behind the eyes. Just no awareness whatsoever. And, I don't know how people continue to argue against this, but Donald Trump is sick, and he's got to go."

Michelle Obama humiliates Trump with brutal reminder of her husband 'winning a Peace Prize'

Former First Lady Michelle Obama issued strong praise for her husband at the opening of the Barack Obama Presidential Center on the south side of Chicago on Thursday. And in that profound speech, she criticized President Donald Trump without mentioning his name.

After words of thanks, she turned to her husband to talk about watching him serve eight years in the White House.

"I know it hasn't always been easy, but there hasn't been a single second through this experience that standing by your side hasn't left me in awe," Mrs. Obama said. "Eight years in the crucible. And not once did you melt from the heat. Not once did you let it harden you. Instead, you used it to reveal your truest essence, your stubborn optimism and unflinching courage. Your dazzling brilliance and unpretentious decency, your ferocious work ethic and absolutely unshakable moral fiber. And to do it all as a first and the higher standard that comes with all that."

She recalled that he was criticized for not being experienced enough as a one-term U.S. senator and constitutional law expert. She then delivered a thinly-veiled take down of Obama's critics, including the current president.

"The lies about your birthright, your faith, your patriotism. The outrage when you stated the biological fact that if you'd had a son that he too would be Black. Yet, you were unflappable at every turn, always focused, always calm, always looking at the long view," she championed. "How absurd it is to even imagine that you might have buckled under the pressure, even once lashed out in frustration, lost your temper."

She continued: "How absurd it is to imagine that you might have done anything but make our family and this entire country proud. No, you were too busy ... You were doing the people's work, rescuing our economy, expanding health care, ending a war, ordering the [Osama] Bin Laden raid, saving an auto industry, winning a Nobel Peace Prize. Keeping us safe from Ebola. Regulating the banks."

Trump has been frustrated about his inability to win a Nobel Peace Prize. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, sitting behind former President Obama, could be seen laughing, turning to her husband, covering her mouth and making a comment.

She closed the speech saying that "a lasting legacy isn't a name on a building," — another slight at Trump, who's pushed to add his name to the John F. Kennedy Center of the Performing Arts.

At many points in the speech the former president could be seen wiping away tears as his wife's voice echoed with passion and love.

George Conway details how Macron trolled 'ignoramus' Trump at Versailles

Conservative Never-Trump attorney turned Democratic congressional candidate George Conway joined a wave of critics arguing French President Emmanuel Macron had trolled President Donald Trump by hosting the signing of his Iran deal at the Palace of Versailles. The palace is the site of the infamous 1919 treaty, which ended World War I and, some historians say, planted the seeds of Hitler’s rise and World War II.

“Mon Dieu,” exclaimed Conway. “Versailles.”

“Macron is trolling the grand ignoramus @realDonaldTrump like no one has ever trolled him before,” he wrote. “The only thing he could have done worse to Trump would have been put Trump’s name on the Compiègne Forest rail car and tricked him into signing it there.”

The Compiègne Forest rail car was the site of the signing of the World War I armistice in 1918 between the Allied Powers and Germany, indicating Germany’s surrender. After Germany defeated France, Hitler used that same rail car to have France sign the 1940 armistice as revenge for 1918.

Freelance journalist Euan MacDonald made similar remarks: “French President Emmanuel Macron pulls off what could be the greatest diplomatic troll of all time by getting Trump to sign the ‘$300 Billion US Surrender to Iran’ deal in… Versailles. The ignoramus Trump will have been clueless as to the historical significance of the location.”

Futurist Jamie Metzl added: “It’s painful to watch Donald Trump sign his surrender to the Iranian regime at Versailles, the site of France’s surrender to Prussia in 1871 and Germany’s surrender to the Allies in 1919.”

“The symbolism is extraordinary, not to mention the omen,” Metzl continued. “Hard to imagine what ignoramus on the Trump protocol team thought Versailles was the right backdrop for this humiliation.”

It’s unclear whether President Trump was aware of the symbolism of Versailles.

“President Emmanuel Macron invited US President Donald Trump to dinner at the Palace of Versailles outside Paris after the G7 summit ended,” AFP reported. “Macron and his wife Brigitte welcomed Trump to the lavish former royal residence, after Trump expressed excitement, saying Versailles had ‘a lot of gold, I want to check it out’.”

“Trump — who has likened himself to a ‘king’ and made no secret of his fondness for pomp and circumstance — acknowledged the dinner would delay his return home, but said he did not mind,” AFP also reported.

“Versailles is not gold leaf. It’s the real deal. And I said, I’d like to do it,” Trump said.

Longtime Trump defender unleashes on horrifying 'disaster for America'

One of President Donald Trump's own supporters made it clear just how furious she was with his deal with Iran.

Speaking to CNN, Batya Ungar-Sargon of "Batya" on NewsNation said that it gave her no pleasure to trash the president.

" You wrote the greatest superpower to ever exist, brought to its knees by a few minds, just a disaster for America," said co-host John Berman.

Ungar-Sargon noted that the "disaster" Iran deal only guarantees free passage to ships through the Strait of Hormuz for 60 days. After that, Iran can begin charging tolls. It will likely increase the price of oil starting in mid-August.

"If they could plant a few mines in that strait, they could bring the greatest superpower to ever exist in human history to its knees," she said. "And that is just such a disaster. I mean, what message do you think that signals to China right now? It's really, really horrifying. And I'm very surprised that this administration would go down this road. "

On Truth Social, Trump has called any critics of the deal are "jealous," "bad people" or "stupid."

Berman asked her what would have happened had a Democrat signed the deal that Trump did.

"I mean, you know the answer to that, right? There's no Republican who, if a Democrat had signed this exact document, they would blast them to kingdom come. We all know this," said Ungar-Sargon.

She went on to slam Trump for his comments during the press conference on Wednesday, in which he "repeatedly said things that were the exact opposite of the things that he had promised."

She conceded, "I am a big fan of this president. I think he has done amazing, amazing things in the first year of his second term, which is why I'm so surprised by this."

Berman keyed in on her comment, "Again, just to reiterate what you said, you are a Trump supporter by your own words there. You were a fan of this president."

"So when we first went into this, the president laid out three main goals. He said he wanted to get rid of their navy. He wanted to get rid of their ballistic capabilities, and he wanted to get rid of their ability to achieve a nuclear weapon," said Ungar-Sargon. "Um, I don't see any of that in this [memorandum of understanding]. Of course, they promised not to pursue a nuclear weapon. Guess what? They promised that to President Obama as well."

She falsely claimed that Iran then "lied and cheated." In fact, the United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) showed that Iran was in compliance as late as of March 2018, a timeline on its website showed. In May 2018, Trump withdrew the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which required the weapons inspectors to test for enriched uranium, Bloomberg News reported at the time.

Ungar-Sargon called Trump's attacks on those who disagree with the deal "very insulting."

"They have never been as weak as they were last Friday, right before the president agreed to this exact deal. And I just do not understand why we're letting up the pressure in 60 days when they have all their money back, they're going to be much stronger and much less likely to agree to anything that would make this not just better than the JCPOA, but just as good as the JCPOA," she added.

Here’s who Trump is trying to save by throwing top official under the bus: strategist

Vice President JD Vance has the bad luck of trying to sell another book at the same time that he's being put in charge of a much-maligned deal to end the war in Iran. But one strategist thinks the real intention is to cover up who the actual architect was.

CNN's Audie Cornish closed her Thursday show talking about President Donald Trump's comment during his G7 press conference, during which he said he'd blame Vance if the memorandum of understanding (MOU) fails.

Democratic strategist Meghan Hays asked if anyone truly believed that Vance was the one who negotiated the Iran deal.

Hays, the former Joe Biden White House director of messaging, asked: "Are we just trying to hide that Jared Kushner was actually the one negotiating this deal, who does not work for the United States government?"

"I mean, I just think that maybe Marco Rubio will end up better when he's trying to run for president," Hays continued. "But I don't think that Donald Trump cares who gets blamed as long as it's not him. But I don't think the American people are that stupid to [not] realize their gas prices went up because we went into a war of choice by Donald Trump."

A report from The New York Times in May said that Trump wanted to give Iran a $300 billion "bribe to back out of a war he never should have waded into," as The New Republic characterized it. The Times said that an Iranian official put the reconstruction of Iran at $300 billion.

The idea came from United States Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff and the president's son-in-law, both of whom are real estate investors. The two had also pitched a kind of real estate investment fund that would help provide financial incentives for developers in Iran. Kushner is already being investigated by the House Judiciary Democrats for cashing in on foreign investment funds while working on behalf of the United States government.

If Democrats win in November, the Trump administration believes that investigations will promptly begin, The Hill reported.

The Jerusalem Post noted that Israeli right-wing figures are attacking Witkoff and Kushner as "losers" over the plan.

Fox News reporter confronts Trump with his own words on Iran about-face

On Wednesday at a press conference during the G7 summit in France, President Donald Trump’s hypocrisy was laid bare when Fox News reporter Peter Doocy quoted Trump's own previous statement regarding Iran, resulting in an embarrassing exchange.

“A wise man once said in January of 2020,” said Doocy, “Iran never won a war but never lost a negotiation.”

“Who said that?” asked the president.

“Donald Trump,” Doocy revealed.

“That's what I thought you were going to say,” said Trump.

Doocy continued: “So how do you go back to the United States and convince a skeptical American public that this deal is a win here?”

From there, Trump launched into a solid two-minute-long rant that briefly touched on Iran before abruptly shifting to his war with the media.

“They lost militarily? Okay,” he began before stammering through a muddled assertion that, even if Iran said, “‘Praise be to Allah, Donald Trump is the greatest president ever. We totally concede. We totally give up. This war is over. We have failed,’ the New York Times and CNN — and a couple of others are not all that dishonest — they'd say Iran had a great victory. Okay? They practically do that.”

From there Trump diverged from discussion of Iran to focus on attacking the press, saying, “We need a fair press. That's why they're all doing so badly, because they lost credibility. When I win in a landslide and I had 93 percent bad press — they take good stories about me and make them bad. The media has so little credibility that the people voted for me.”

Before turning Trump’s words back at him, Doocy had begun their exchange with questions about the $300 billion payment that is rumored to be part of the peace deal.

“Only if they're doing things right,” Trump had responded, repeating the phrase three more times. The president went on to justify the fund by pointing out how much destruction the U.S. had caused in Iran, before shifting tone and saying, “So, uh, they have to behave themselves. If they're not behaving, they get hit again. You know, they'll be hit again because we can do it very easily.”

He went on to say how much he appreciates that Russian President Vladimir Putin has remained “totally neutral” in the war, even though his own officials have previously asserted that Russia helped Iran target U.S. forces.

Doocy then asked about reports that the U.S. would allow Iran to access its frozen assets.

“Well, the unfreezing, it's an easy one to answer,” explained Trump. “We have taken a lot of their money… It's not our money. It's their money. And we froze it at a certain point in time. I guess we're going to have to give it back.”

While on the campaign trail in 2015, he frequently claimed that former President Obama had “sent Boeing 757s over there, loaded with cash” to bribe Iran into joining the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) — the “nuclear deal” Trump ended upon entering office. In fact, the Obama administration had allowed Iran to retrieve $1.7 billion in unfrozen assets. The Trump deal provides Iran nearly 200 times that amount.

Trump’s 'demented' speech torn apart by critics as officials look on 'aimlessly'

President Donald Trump had a press conference at the G7 in France, where he appeared to be rambling to such a degree that MS NOW cut from the press conference to refer to him as "incoherent."

Deadline's Ted Johnson commented on X that MS NOW's Alecia Mendez broke into Trump's speech, calling him "a rambling, incoherent president of the United States attempting to take a victory lap over his page-and-a-half Iran agreement."

One of Trump's bizarre comments included, "When you see young men walking around without legs, that's [Qasem] Soleimani."

Trump also acknowledged that they would be releasing money to Iran, which he has criticized former President Barack Obama for doing.

"The unfreezing, that's the easy one to answer. We have taken a lot of their money. And we have their money. We have taken a lot of their money. It's not our money. It's their money. And we froze it. At a certain point in time, I guess we're gonna have to give it back. You know that if we didn't give it back, nobody would ever invest in the dollar again," Trump said.

Trump bragged that "drugs are down by water 97 percent. And over 60 percent we're down. And now we're going to go and focus on the land. And they come through Mexico. Mexico has lost control of their country. The cartels run Mexico. And it's sad. And the president is a very good woman, but she's a very scared woman. The drug cartels are totally running Mexico. It's not even close."

He then swatted at a fly, saying, "I wanted to get that little sucker. But I missed. I hate missing."

The rambling presser prompted a lot of comments from those observing the press conference.

Filmmaker Steven DeKnight remarked, "Trump in the G7 presser is rambling, delusional, and completely disconnected from reality. 'The word affordability is a fake word made up by the Democrats.' What a pathetic old man. If you still support this moral and ethical black hole, you deserve the pain he’s causing."

Retired soldier Robert Clark wrote, "Trump speaking about the Iran Agreement after the G7 Summit on live TV. Rambling, delusional, demented word salad. Flanking Trump, [Secretary of Commerce Howard] Lutnick and [Secretary of State Marco] Rubio look very uncomfortable and are staring aimlessly away."

The News Agents, Lewis Goodall, called Trump "largely incomprehensible in a rambling set of remarks at the G7."

Trump just laid bare his plan to throw top official under the bus

President Donald Trump, speaking at the G7 Summit in France, took questions about the one-and-a-half-page Iran memorandum of understanding and revealed that if nothing works out, he'll blame it on his vice president.

The final question in Tuesday's rambling press conference came from Fox News' Peter Doocy. Doocy asked the president why he isn't staying in Europe over the weekend to participate in the signing of the agreement and is sending the Vice President JD Vance instead.

"Yeah, I might, but ... this is a memorandum of understanding. It's very important, but it might not be the kind of a document that I should be signing," Trump said.

"Is there some element to this where you send the vice president, and if it works out, great, you'll look like a genius for sending him. And if it doesn't work out, it's the vice president?" Doocy asked.

"I like that idea. Sure. Why not? This way, if it works out, I'm going to take the credit. If it doesn't work out, I'm blaming JD. You better be careful. JD, he's going to turn his plane around and get the hell out of here. Yeah, I like that idea. I think it's a good idea," Trump said before ended the press conference.

On Tuesday, The Mirror reported that Trump is pondering firing some of the top Cabinet officials who oppose his deal with Iran. Those include Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and CIA Director John Ratcliffe.

"The debate has been settled. Anyone who opposed it could pay a personal price," a source told The Mirror.

One person who appears to be safe is Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who serves in multiple roles for the president.

It's unclear whether Trump would be willing to fire Vance, who has opposed to the Iran war from the start. In April, The New York Times reported that Vance was the most skeptical voice on the strikes. But The Mirror reported that Vance now supports the deal.

CNN chases down GOP senator after hearing Trump creates 'absolute mess'

President Donald Trump announced at the G7 Summit that he was "canceling" the confirmation hearing for his nominee for director of national intelligence, which was scheduled for Wednesday. A president can't decide whether or not a congressional hearing is held.

Punchbowl News' Andrew Desiderio reported on Wednesday morning that Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) told reporters that Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) is still planning to hold the DNI hearing for Jay Clayton anyway. Cotton is the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. The only reason he wouldn't hold the hearing is if Trump withdrew the nomination or Clayton didn't show up.

“And then from there on, we'll just have to take it a day at a time until we get more clarity on what the White House position is on this," said Thune.

Desiderio asked Thune why he thought Trump was doing something like this and Thune said, "Good question."

His colleague, Jake Sherman, called it an "absolute mess for Trump/The Hill."

CNN showed footage of reporters chasing after Cotton to ask whether there would be a hearing on Wednesday as planned and if they intended to vote on Clayton. Trump hasn't indicated whether he will withdraw Clayton's name from nomination, but Trump made it clear he was happy to let his "acting DNI Bill Pulte" continue his work without congressional support.

Congressional correspondent Lauren Fox said that congressional officials are just as confused about what is going on as the press seems to be.

Fox asked Cotton whether he'd spoken to Clayton and if he had a comment, but Cotton said he didn't have any comment beyond the statement that the committee released. He then tried to run into the member's elevator but was stalled waiting for it.

"So, you will proceed. Just to be clear, you will proceed with the hearing. And you expect Jay Clayton to be there despite what the president is saying?" reporter Chad Pergram asked as Cotton stood waiting.

"Chad, you have our statement," Cotton said.

"It's about as clear as mud about whether this hearing is going forward," Fox said.

Democratic ranking member of the committee Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) said in a statement on Tuesday that Trump's latest social media posts underscore the reality that "the biggest obstacle to resolving these issues has not been Senate Democrats or Senate Republicans. It has been the chaos and confusion coming from the White House."

The goal was to hold the hearing quickly with a vote on Thursday.

'Morning Joe' calls Iran 'richer and more powerful' thanks to Trump

On his Wednesday morning show, "Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough attacked President Donald Trump for bungling the Iran War.

Trump spoke to the press from the G7 Summit in France around 6:30 a.m. EST where he gave details about the tentative deal to end the war in Iran.

Bloomberg News has the 14-point agreement, though it has little in the way of details. Among the details is a $300 million "reparations" payout, as confirmed, in part, by the Wall Street Journal, Scarborough said.

"JD Vance has admitted on TV to the $300 billion — he was asked about this $300 billion fund, which really is — it's reparations for Iran. It's as if we lost the war, $300 billion in the MOU language that we have seen. The draft language says that the financing will be guaranteed by the United States of America. So we're guaranteeing $300 billion in reparation funding for Iran. And then the Wall Street Journal is also reporting the unfreezing of Iranian funds across the globe. "

Ultimately, they're scoring "a tidy $500 billion slush fund for Iran to use on their nuke programs, to use for Hamas to use for Islamic Jihad, to use for Hezbollah to use for terrorism attacks as terrorism attacks across the globe. It is it again, half $1 trillion for a regime that was about to fall before we went in and gave them new life," the host said.

Scarborough cited an editorial saying that Iran is "euphoric over what has happened."

He said that in Iran's eyes, they stepped into the ring with "The Great Satan" and "took the punch. And we're now going to help them get $500 billion. They took America's best punch, and they've come out stronger, richer, and more powerful because of it."

Trump's problem won't be with Democrats, but with his own GOP allies.

"Morning Joe" co-host Willie Geist commented on some of the striking language coming from the president.

Among the odd things Trump has done is praise the new regime in Tehran, saying they've been "nice to deal with" and that they are "very rational people."

"That's the president of the United States talking about the regime in Tehran that has called for the death of the United States for 47 years," Geist said. "And, Joe, you made the point that Iran feels like it took its best punch. It also made a bet that all the bluster from President Trump was just that bluster when he said, 'A civilization is going to die tonight if they don't come to the table and get rid of the nuclear program. We're going to hit them harder than they have ever been hit.'"

"And that was the bet that this regime made, that Donald Trump was all talk. And to this point, it appears that he has been and that none of those objectives laid out on February 28th have been achieved yet," he added.

Geist called the plan "disastrous."

Scarborough took a victory lap, claiming that from the start of the war, he knew that this would be the way things would ultimately be resolved.

"And he's just going to pull the ripcord and get out of there when it becomes too uncomfortable. Politically, they became quite indignant and said, That's not a possibility. I said, well, you've got to know who you're dealing with now," he said.

The 6 most unhinged things Trump just said about Iran deal during G7 presser

President Donald Trump spoke at the G7 on Wednesday about the memorandum of understanding (MOU) that his administration developed with Iran to end the war.

Among the most perplexing things the president said was that the markets love the MOU, and if he doesn't like the final agreement, "we'll just start bombing again." He continued to refuse to hand out text of the agreement, but said that among the things in the agreement is that, for now, the Strait of Hormuz will be open "toll-free beyond the 60 days" and that Iran will "never" have a nuclear weapon.

Trump promised Americans would see prices go down because the Strait will reopen without tolls.

"Oil is at 73 or 74 and it's getting to very close to where it was before the crisis," Trump claimed. "The difference is now we have Iran without a nuclear weapon. So, we'll see how that all plays out. I think people are going to be very happy. But there's nothing so smart as the market and the market loves it beyond anything that I've actually seen."

Third, Trump claimed "stupid people" and Democrats want the war to continue. In reality, there are plenty of people on the right who are displeased with the current outcome of the war.

"The alternative would be a worldwide depression. You know, the stupid people want to have a worldwide depression. And the stupid people, so you can only go so far," Trump said.

"You could drive somebody into the ground and a lot of bad things happen. Number one, the Strait would never open because, uh, they don't like floating billion-dollar ships up and down a strait when there's rockets flying over them and mines all over the place. So the Strait would never be open. It wouldn't be open for a long time."

Fourth, Trump claimed that the "affordability crisis" was caused by Democrats. He then said Democrats "caused affordability" and then that affordability is "just another con job. They made up the word affordability."

Another bizarre comment from Trump was relitigating the 2020 election while in a bilateral meeting with the President of Egypt.

"Uh, a dam was built in Ethiopia, and it's causing tremendous problems for Egypt, and I'm very aware. I had that deal settled, and then we had a rigged election, and somebody came in, and they didn't know too much about that deal. They were not going to settle anything. But but we'll get back into it. We'll see if we can settle it. Okay," Trump said.

In 2020, Trump said that the U.S. would simply "blow up the dam." Critics at the time blamed Trump for escalating the tensions. Trump claimed that he "saved a big war" and demanded a Nobel Peace Prize, the BBC reported at the time. On Wednesday, he claimed that former President Joe Biden messed up the whole thing.

Finally, Trump repeated his debunked claim that former President Barack Obama "handed [Iran] a billion seven in cash. Gave them ... billions and billions of dollars, but he gave them $1.7 billion dollars in cash, green cash from banks, into a Boeing 757 and flew it into Iran," Trump claimed.

In fact, the U.S. simply gave Iran access to its money that had been tied up in banks as a result of the sanctions. Part of the JCPOA was allowing Iran to have access to it's own money again.


Agony as 'befuddled' Trump 'implodes' on the world stage: report

Former MS NOW analyst David Shuster said Trump’s “word salad and cognitive confusion” was undeniably on display at this week’s G7 summit in France.

Shuster had plenty of fodder to choose from at the event. While speaking with the Emir of Qatar Trump launched into a rambling geography lesson that would fail most any 7th Grader.

“Working with Qatar and the people of Qatar was really a pleasure,” Trump told Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani. “They were tough and strong. They are the closest to Iran, physically. With other countries I’ve noticed they’ve got to travel about 45 minutes to get there. But you, you can walk right across the border.”

“No. You cannot walk across the border from Qatar to Iran because they are separated by the Persian Gulf,” Shuster informed viewers of his Rebel HQ podcast. “Did Trump confuse Qatar with Kuwait or Iraq? Who knows? And who knows where Trump’s mind was as he sat around the table with G7 members for a working meeting.”

Shuster then cited the brutal tableside moment when French President Emmanuel Macron asked participants to turn and face the cameras. Trump ignored the request, seeming oblivious and spacing out despite the whole table facing forward in expectation. Shuster pointed out that Italy Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni appeared to be fumbling with a notebook and was looking down, and it only appeared that Trump bounced back and took notice of the camera op after Meloni faced the camera and smiled.

“Only then did Trump seem to snap out of it and catch on,” said Shuster.

Shuster also referenced the long, painful moment Trump took clutching at the hand of Macron’s wife Brigitte Macron and holding it awkwardly “a full 15 seconds before releasing it,” even as the first lady made efforts to pull back.

“As everybody can see Trump has gained some weight since his last G-7 summit,” said Shuster adding identifying arrows to the president’s protuberant belly and hips. “But it’s his confusion that has taken world leaders and international leaders by storm. At the end of the G7 arrival photo op, Trump was told to exist stage left. He wandered to the right.”

“The other side,” international leaders called out to him before he wandered off.

“This way,” urged Macron.

“To be fair these large photo ops can be confusing for everybody, but Donald Trump’s physical appearance, including his weight, the heavy makeup on his hand and his befuddled facial expressions are getting noticed,” said Shuster. “And Trump’s apparent health challenges are raising more questions about his judgement, or lack of judgement.”

“Does Donald Trump really know or understand what is in the emerging Iran peace deal?” demanded Shuster. “Does Trump even remember why he took the U.S. to war with Iran to begin with?”

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