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Trump Faces a Full Revolt in the Senate, Even Senator Tom Cotton

“Who thought this was a good idea? Who chose this timing?” Cotton asked bluntly.

Cotton was speaking about Trump’s slush fund to pay January 6 rioters and other convicted criminals when Trump’s Attorney General Todd Blanche pitched the idea to the Senate.

Cotton knows the answer is Trump. He just didn’t say it. Other Senators did, many of them.

The Week That Broke Trump’s Control Over Congress

The Wall Street Journal comments on The Week That Broke Trump’s Control Over Congress

Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, and a team of White House aides arrived at a hastily organized meeting near the Senate chamber hoping to reassure Republicans about a $1.776 billion “anti-weaponization fund” promoted by President Trump.

Sen. Tom Cotton, a Trump ally from Arkansas, wasn’t having it.

“Who thought this was a good idea? Who chose this timing?” Cotton asked bluntly inside the Senate’s ornate Mike Mansfield Room, pressing Blanche, White House legislative affairs director James Braid and others about the fund with a series of point-blank questions, according to people familiar with the tense exchange.

Cotton was far from alone—more than a dozen Republican senators grilled Blanche about the settlement in the two-hour meeting, the people said, questioning its merit and warning that it could derail approval of a $70 billion multiyear package funding immigration enforcement.

“One of the roughest meetings I’ve seen in my entire time in the Senate,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R., Texas), said Friday on his podcast. “Fiery does not begin to cut it,” Cruz said, adding that some senators were screaming at Blanche.

For more than a year, Republican senators had largely been deferential to Trump’s wishes—from backing contentious cabinet nominees to giving the president free rein on tariffs and the Iran war.

This week, they revolted en masse, fed up with Trump’s insistence on settling personal scores and pursuing pet projects at the expense of their legislative agenda. The tipping point came when Trump endorsed a rival to Texas Sen. John Cornyn on Tuesday, a move that stunned many of Cornyn’s colleagues. They saw it as a reckless way to treat a senior Republican incumbent whose seat the party can’t afford to lose in November.

“I’m just sad,” said an emotional Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R., Wyo.) after Trump announced the endorsement. She fretted that it would now cost Republicans “a fortune” to try to hold Cornyn’s seat.

Trump’s approval numbers are sinking headed into the midterms. A new Wall Street Journal poll found Trump’s job approval at 41%, with 57% disapproving, down from 45% approval in January. In a troubling sign for the White House, the survey showed that the share of Republicans who say they “strongly approve” of Trump’s job performance had dropped from 75% in January to 57% in May.

The poll also found Democrats leading Republicans, 48% to 40%, in a congressional ballot measuring which party is favored to lead the next Congress. The poll was conducted from May 7 to May 18.

ICE funding paralyzed

People familiar with senators’ thinking said far more than half of the GOP conference has concerns about the Justice Department settlement fund, set up to pay people who claim political persecution—including Jan. 6, 2021, rioters who stormed the Capitol and could now walk away with millions from the federal government. Many also are uncomfortable with Trump’s push for $1 billion in security funding tied to his planned White House ballroom, a project Trump had insisted would be paid for with private donations.

The “anti-weaponization” fund was created as the result of the administration settling a Trump lawsuit against his own government. It came just ahead of a deadline set by a federal judge, who demanded explanations on how Trump could be on both sides of the case.

The White House “put themselves in a bad spot. It wasn’t Congress that did it. Congress has had no input. Might be part of the problem,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy (R., La.), who lost his recent primary after Trump endorsed a rival.

The fight has paralyzed progress on Republicans’ long-sought bill to provide funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol. Alaska GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski likened it to “dropping a bomb” on the legislative process. Senators wanted to wrap that up this week ahead of Trump’s June 1 deadline but were forced to punt until next month.

Trump told reporters Thursday that he didn’t know if he was losing control of the Senate. He made clear Friday he wasn’t backing down on the fund.

“I could have settled my case…for an absolute fortune,” he said on Truth Social. “Instead, I am helping others, who were so badly abused.”

Trump lashed out at Sen. Thom Tillis (R., N.C.), who had drawn Trump’s ire by labeling the fund a “payout pot for punks” and “stupid on stilts.” The president said Tillis—who decided to retire under pressure from Trump—“can have all the fun he wants for a few months, with some of his RINO friends, screwing the Republican Party.”

Tillis responded that Republicans need to do well in November, but “the stupid stuff is killing our chances!”

GOP senators say the ball is in the administration’s court to make changes to the settlement. According to people familiar with the matter, senators in the meeting with Blanche delivered a message to the White House: You need to fix this.

“The administration is going to have to come up with some suggestions and ideas,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R., S.D.) told reporters Thursday. Asked if Trump’s endorsements against incumbents played into the logjam, he responded: “There’s a political component to everything we do around here.”

Cruz, in his podcast, said he expected the administration would move—at minimum—to modify the fund or face “a full-on revolt” in the Senate.

Senators Primed for a Revolt

The chamber was primed for a revolt after Trump’s decision to endorse scandal-tarred Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton over Cornyn in the state’s Republican Senate primary runoff.

Republicans hold a 53-47 seat majority in the Senate. Republicans have warned that Paxton, who was impeached by his own party and later acquitted and is in the middle of a divorce initiated by his wife on “biblical grounds,” could force the party to spend tens of millions of dollars that could be invested elsewhere on the Senate map, in competitive states such as Maine, North Carolina, Ohio, Iowa and Alaska.

Some Republican aides viewed Trump’s decision to endorse Paxton at the last minute as a sign of his broader frustration with the Senate. Trump has been raging on social media for months about passing the Save America Act, which would require proof of citizenship to vote but lacks the 60 votes required to overcome a Senate filibuster. Trump has called passing the bill critical to Republicans winning the midterms.

Until this week, Senate Republicans, with the exception of a few like Tillis who are retiring or representing swing states, had mostly been deferential to the president.

But that support broke down when the Trump administration unveiled the settlement fund, derided by members of both parties as a “slush fund,” just as the House and Senate were hoping to approve their immigration-enforcement funding package.

“Somebody described it as a galactic blunder, and I think that’s probably true,” Sen. Ron Johnson (R., Wis.) said to CNN.

Former Sen. Lamar Alexander (R., Tenn.) who returned to the U.S. Capitol this week for the first time in five years, said Trump’s decision not to endorse Cornyn had affected Senate Republicans because so many members respect the Texas lawmaker.

“I’m not sure what the president’s strategy is in purging Senate Republicans who support him 99% of the time,” said Alexander.

Trump Has Lost the Governing Plot

Also Consider the WSJ Editorial Trump Has Lost the Governing Plot

Republicans don’t want to say this publicly, but privately they do: President Trump’s personal political obsessions are hurting his Presidency, harming the chances for further policy gains the rest of this year, and putting control of the House and Senate in jeopardy.

The trigger for the Senate revolt Thursday was Mr. Trump’s insistence on his $1.776 billion “anti-weaponization fund.” This is allegedly part of his settlement, if you want to call it that, with the IRS over the leak of his tax returns. It’s an agreement between Mr. Trump and the Justice Department which reports to him—he is on both sides of the deal—to pay Jan. 6 riot participants and others Mr. Trump claims were unjustly targeted by Democratic officials.

Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson, hardly a GOP faint heart, said someone had called it a “galactic blunder,” and “that’s probably true.” Mr. Trump has already pardoned the rioters but now he wants the rest of us to pay them.

GOP leaders pulled the entire funding legislation when it appeared they might lose the weaponization vote and went home on recess. But Democrats will be back again with the same amendments if the bill returns with the same payout.

Then there’s Mr. Trump’s East Wing ballroom fixation, for which he wants $220 million from Congress. He has a point about hardened security for the new White House area, but he had said when he first tore down the old East Wing that it would require no public money.

The parliamentarian struck the ballroom funding from the DHS bill under budget reconciliation rules, so now the GOP will need 60 votes (not 51) to pass ballroom funding. Mr. Trump naturally berated GOP Senators for not firing the parliamentarian.

Senate GOP frustration is also boiling after Mr. Trump’s campaign against two Senators running for re-election. First he helped defeat Lousiana’s Bill Cassidy in a primary, and this week he endorsed Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton over Sen. John Cornyn. Mr. Trump’s motives in both cases were largely personal—he wanted revenge against Mr. Cassidy for thinking his behavior on Jan. 6, 2021, was an impeachable offense, and Mr. Cornyn didn’t endorse him for President with enough alacrity to suit his loyalty test.

In both cases, he’ll get slavish replacements—that is, if Mr. Paxton wins the primary and then doesn’t lose in November. But meantime there are governing consequences for alienating allies. Mr. Cassidy provided the swing vote that allowed the Democrats’ war powers resolution to advance, and he was a likely no on ballroom funding too. Mr. Cornyn is such a class act that he won’t take gratuitous votes that hurt his party, but he’ll have no incentive to bow to Mr. Trump’s demands either.

By the way, GOP House leaders pulled a war powers vote Thursday when it appeared Mr. Trump would lose that too. That will also come back again. Mr. Trump can always veto the resolution, but the erosion of support for the war is a sign of overall eroding political support.

Mr. Trump’s politics has always been largely personal, but in his second term it has become self-indulgent even by his standards. The Trump name on everything, the Beltway “arch” and other monuments to French-like grandeur. And most of all the politics of retribution and lawfare as he seeks to ruin anyone he thinks has wronged him. He seems incapable of rising above, even as voters care much more about the economy and prices and his job approval falls to new lows.

Mr. Trump’s Presidency will be all but over—except for impeachment 3.0—if the GOP loses control of Congress in November. If he wants to accomplish more legislatively, he has only a few months to do it. Does he want his remaining legacy to be a ballroom, an Arc de Trump, and payoffs for his friends from a fund that Republicans would denounce if a Democratic President tried it?

Mr. Trump needs a second-year reset, or he is headed toward a second-term failure.

Senator Revolt

  • Tom Cotton: “Who thought this was a good idea? Who chose this timing?”
  • Ted Cruz: “One of the roughest meetings I’ve seen in my entire time in the Senate,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R., Texas), said Friday on his podcast. “Fiery does not begin to cut it,” Cruz said, adding that some senators were screaming at Blanche. Cruz, in his podcast, said he expected the administration would move—at minimum—to modify the fund or face “a full-on revolt” in the Senate.
  • Cynthia Lummis: “I’m just sad,” said an emotional Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R., Wyo.) after Trump announced the endorsement. She fretted that it would now cost Republicans “a fortune” to try to hold Cornyn’s seat.
  • Thom Tillis: Tillis had drawn Trump’s ire by labeling the fund a “payout pot for punks” and “stupid on stilts.”
  • John Thune: “The administration is going to have to come up with some suggestions and ideas,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R., S.D.) told reporters
  • Ron Johnson: “Somebody described it as a galactic blunder, and I think that’s probably true,” Sen. Ron Johnson (R., Wis.) said to CNN.
  • Bill Cassidy: The White House “put themselves in a bad spot. It wasn’t Congress that did it. Congress has had no input. Might be part of the problem,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy (R., La.).
  • Lisa Murkowski: Alaska GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski likened it to “dropping a bomb” on the legislative process.

Reflections on RINOs

The MAGA response will be to label Cassidy, Murkowski, Tillis, and Thune as RINOs, Republicans In Name Only.

Labeling Cotton, Cruz, Lummis, and Johnson as RINOs won’t be so easy.

The biggest RINO of all is Trump. He has sponsored wars. His extreme tariffs costs jobs and clobber small businesses.

Trump protects podophiles and rapists, attacks the Pope, and builds monuments to himself.

Oh wait. I forgot. Sponsoring wars, killing jobs, protecting pedophiles, attacking the Pope, and building statutes to yourself are all Republican ideals now.

Those who don’t support such things are RINOs.

Trump Not Headed for Failure

The Journal said Trump is headed for failure. I strongly disagree. Trump is not headed for failure, he is a proven failure already.

Trump is a vindictive, pedophile-protecting liar, whose economic policy is an inflation disaster.

On top of that he started a stupid war after claiming Democrats were likely to do so.

Ten Trump Failures

  1. Inflation is high and rising
  2. War after campaigning against it
  3. Tariffs are an economic disaster and very unpopular
  4. Job growth is flat at best according to best data, manufacturing losses
  5. Deportations have been a political, moral, and economic disaster the way carried out
  6. Epstein, still no release of files
  7. Trump sounds like Elizabeth Warren on price gouging
  8. Lawfare and retribution including the slush fund, Paxton, and Massie
  9. Self-indulgence including the ballroom, arch, and his image plastered everywhere.
  10. Israel sets US policy

The only thing trump got mostly right was sealing the border.

Tulsi Gabbard Resigns, Her Political Career Ruined by Allegiance to Trump

I received some pushback for my post Tulsi Gabbard Resigns, Her Political Career Ruined by Allegiance to Trump

Tulsi became everything she railed against, then she quit.

I stand by what I said.

I should have linked to some other supporting posts. For example, please consider my February 3, 2026 article Dear Tulsi, What the Hell Happened to You?

The Hill comments Blanche on Gabbard’s presence at FBI election raid: ‘I don’t know why the director was there’

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said Sunday he was unsure why Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was present during an FBI search of a Georgia election center on Wednesday.

“I don’t know why the director was there,” Blanche told host Dana Bash on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “She is not part of the grand jury investigation, but she is for sure a key part of our efforts at election integrity and making sure that we have free and fair elections.”

Reuters photographer Elijah Nouvelage on Wednesday captured a shot of Gabbard, wearing a dark jacket and baseball cap, speaking on the phone outside an election office in Fulton County. Democrats on the Senate and House Intelligence committees have demanded Gabbard testify on her appearance at the facility.

Tulsi Gabbard accused of trying to ‘bury’ whistleblower complaint

Totally unrelated to the above sickening events, we now learn Tulsi Gabbard accused of trying to ‘bury’ whistleblower complaint

Classified Whistleblower Complaint About Tulsi Gabbard Stalls Within Her Agency

The Wall Street Journal reports Classified Whistleblower Complaint About Tulsi Gabbard Stalls Within Her Agency

A U.S. intelligence official has alleged wrongdoing by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard in a whistleblower complaint that is so highly classified it has sparked months of wrangling over how to share it with Congress, according to U.S. officials and others familiar with the matter.

Prior to Maduro’s capture, Tulsi was silent on Trump blowing up Venezuelan boats 2,000 miles away on made up charges the “narco-terrorists” were a threat to the US.

And there was silence when Trump bombed 7 nations.

If Tusli had any ounce of integrity remaining, she would have resigned on January 3.

Instead, Tusli participated in a nonsensical election witch hunt in Georgia. But Trump is certain to disown her at the first sign of trouble, possibly now.

Mish: February 3, 2026: “Tusli participated in a nonsensical election witch hunt in Georgia. But Trump is certain to disown her at the first sign of trouble, possibly now.

Now was a little delayed. It came yesterday.

Please play this video to see the Tulsi we once knew. And ironically it is from November 2025, after Trump started blowing up boats and bombing 7 nations.

Partial Transcription

Tulsi: For decades, our foreign policy has been trapped in a counterproductive and endless cycle of regime change or nation building.

It was a one size fits all approach of toppling regimes and trying to impose our system of government on others, intervene in conflicts that were barely understood, and walk away with more enemies than allies.

The results, trillions spent, countless live lost, and in many cases the creation of greater security threats.

President Trump was elected by the American people to put an end to this. ….

That’s the Tusli I once knew . She made that speech on November 1, 2025.

What the Hell Happened?

On January 3, 2026, US forces conducted a nighttime raid in Caracas called “Operation Absolute Resolve”. They captured Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores and transported them to New York for trial.

Trump kept Tulsi in the dark the whole time.

Neither Tump nor MAGA (by definition actually) ever fully Trusted Tulsi.

I don’t believe she resigned. I believe she was forced out. OK she had a plausible excuse, her husband has cancer.

A Reuters source says Tulsi Was Forced Out.

A source familiar with the matter said that Gabbard had been forced out by the White House. The White House did not respond to a request for comment, but Davis Ingle, a White ​House spokesperson, said on X that Gabbard was departing in light of her husband’s diagnosis.

Trump has hinted in the past at differences with Gabbard on their approach to Iran, saying in March that she was “softer” ​than him on curbing Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

In April, several sources told Reuters that Gabbard could lose her role in a broader cabinet shakeup.

A senior White House official said then that Trump had expressed displeasure with Gabbard in recent months. Another source with direct knowledge of the matter said the president had asked allies for their thoughts on potential replacements for his intelligence chief.

She has been absent from deliberations between ​Trump and his top national security advisers ⁠on major foreign policy issues, including the U.S. military operation that deposed former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, the Iran war and Cuba.

“She was pushed out by the White House,” the source familiar with Gabbard’s departure told Reuters. “The White House has been unhappy with her for quite some time.”

Forced out or not, Gabbard entered a Faustian bargain with Trump. One by one she abandoned everything she preached.

In the end, it was not enough. It never is with Trump.

Mish Preliminary Senate Forecast, Democrats Pick Up Four Seats

I stick with my assessment Mish Preliminary Senate Forecast, Democrats Pick Up Four Seats

I expect Democrats will pick up 3 to 6 seats. 4 will win the Senate.

When Senators Tom Cotton, Ron Johnson, Ted Cruz, and others are ringing alarm bells, you know there is a fire.

And that is what the polls show too. Given that Trump is Trump, he will not change.

If anything, Trump will get increasingly desperate, losing more voters in the process.

The “Save Act” is Dead going nowhere. That’s why I am confident Trump will lose nearly all the tossup races.

Please read above links for details.

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Mish

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why
why
1 hour ago

Trump reported on his Truth Social account that a peace deal, with the opening of Hormuz, is gonna be announced shortly.

https://trumpstruth.org/statuses/38743

It’s my understanding it’s not the final peace deal, but a 60 day peace deal to give Iran and the US time to negotiate over what to do with the nuclear material.

So I’m skeptical that this is truly the end, but we shall see.

Last edited 1 hour ago by why
Rogerroger
Rogerroger
2 hours ago

2 things.
First trumps wins as long as the irs can not audit him or his family. I don’t think anyone is focused on that point.
Second is all i hear about is how much it will cost to hold a seat or win a race. Know one talks about policies that benefit the voter. Just how much is it gonna cost to sway them.

Peter
Peter
2 hours ago

Pretty obvious she was forced out. She was a good woman until she got Trumped. She should stand as an example to all sensible people not to get close to Trump.

njbr
njbr
3 hours ago

Our new Fed Chair:

Kevin Warsh: “As you demonstrate, Mr. President, every day, energy and purpose are how big obstacles are overcome. Your greatest ambitions are for America.”

And, did you know the new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s father-in-law, Ron Lauder is mentioned over 900 times in the Epstein files?

bringing new meaning to “obligatory obeisance”

Quatloo
Quatloo
4 hours ago

At least 30 shots heard by reporters at the White House north lawn…Trump is inside the White House

Phil in CT
Phil in CT
3 hours ago
Reply to  Quatloo

The decline in marksmanship among attempted US presidential assassins is scandalous. It makes us look like some limp-wristed European country where they regulate firearms.

I’m back robbyrob
I’m back robbyrob
3 hours ago
Reply to  Phil in CT

The best government is a benevolent tyranny tempered by an occasional assassination.
Voltaire

njbr
njbr
3 hours ago
Reply to  Quatloo

The were told to “shoot more” after the WH Correspondents dinner

I’m back robbyrob
I’m back robbyrob
4 hours ago

What next?

Cuba, obviously. TrumpCo has already indicted Raul Castro for some 30-year-old batshit reason, so another snatch-n-grab ala Maduro is probably in the offing.

njbr
njbr
3 hours ago
  • Starting a year before the shootdown, the Cuban government filed multiple protests on repeated violations of its airspace by BTTR aircraft overflying populated zones and dropping thousands of leaflets and other materials calling for popular insurrection against the government.
  • The FAA opened a protracted investigation, met with BTTR president Jose Basulto, and warned him multiple times not to continue his “taunting” provocations. The agency took steps to suspend his pilot’s license but allowed him to keep flying, even as he repeatedly filed false flight plans.
  • High-level U.S. officials, including White House Cuba point man Richard Nuccio, State Department undersecretary Peter Tarnoff, and Secretary of Transportation Federico Peña repeatedly expressed their concerns to the FAA that BTTR flights should be permanently grounded and repeatedly warned that Cuba’s redlines to protect its security should be taken seriously. Their efforts to press the FAA to clip Basulto’s wings failed. Only after the shootdown did the FAA issue a concrete “cease and desist” order against Basulto for what it called “careless or reckless” operations that “endanger the lives or property of others.”

https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/briefing-book/cuba/2026-05-19/cuba-declassified-records-brothers-rescue-shootdown

I’m back robbyrob
I’m back robbyrob
5 hours ago

as I have written here and other medias It just goes on and on and on and on……….
It was already known that President Donald Trump pressured top health officials to allow flavored vapes to hit the market after being leaned on by Big Tobacco executives earlier this month.

But The New York Times has revealed that the decision came just over a week after a massive super political action committee (PAC) donation from one of the cigarette companies looking to have the regulations lifted.

Rogerroger
Rogerroger
1 hour ago

Sure it happens all the time. Just maybe a bit more under the table.

peelo
peelo
6 hours ago

One “probes with bayonets.” — Lenin
Trump’s personality requires that he keep probing harder until he finds the force or object that will stop his process. Countless times I have thought maybe we are arriving there, only to find, to my befuddlement, we were not. But by definition, here will come a time. Nobody arcs upward and outward forever. It is impossible as a matter of physics and biology. Then, there is the collateral damage.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  peelo

Well Cheney died old and even richer plus getting his Lesbian daughter elected to the senate despite being anti-gay.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
7 hours ago

I doubt anything happens to Iran this weekend. The 25th is the Hajj.
Evening of Sun, May 24, 2026 – Fri, May 29, 2026
Saudi Arabia is 7 to 10 hours ahead of the United States, depending on the specific US time zone.

Quatloo
Quatloo
5 hours ago
Reply to  Wilbur Mercer

No one who has been paying attention believes Trump’s claim that a deal with Iran is basically done.

As an example, while Trump is saying the deal provides that the Strait of Hormuz will be open, Iran is saying they will continue to control the Strait and that there will be no “free passage”, meaning they will continue to charge tolls for passage.

Webej
Webej
7 hours ago

In the end, it was not enough. It never is with Trump.

It’s never about anything.
It’s always just about Trump, the person.
The rest is just backdrop.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Webej

To repeat all this is to undercut the US/Israel/the EU.
It makes the BRICS+ rise and limits the function due to internal and external strife.
As far as I can tell only Evangelicals support Israel and this war.
Ukraine started the whole,planned, destruction.
Keep this for a couple of years and try to recall these are the last good days for the west and the former colonizers.

I’m back robbyrob
I’m back robbyrob
7 hours ago

peace in our time! President Donald Trump confirmed Friday afternoon what set off hours of online speculation, posting to Truth Social with an Oval Office statement about a major foreign policy development.
In the post, Trump said he had spoken with a long list of Arab and Muslim world leaders about a possible peace agreement involving Iran. “In addition to many other elements of the Agreement, the Strait of Hormuz will be opened,” he wrote.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago

But China already back channeled all of that and pretty much pimp slapped Trump.
The bigger issue is if Iran gets paid tolls for data cable useage.
Anyone listening to Trump is Charlie Brown as Lucy pulls the foot ball, or Coyote following road Runner into the painted tunnel.

peelo
peelo
6 hours ago

His mouth is moving again. And?

Tulip Hoard
Tulip Hoard
7 hours ago

Mish spot on here well done!

I was pleasantly surprised to hear Lamar Akexander’s comments cited; he was my boss at DOE per my tenure as a member of the Goals 2000 comm. in the early nineties he is a true gentleman.

In a perfect world Tulsi would run in 2028 as the Not Uniparty candidate simply dreaming outloud:)

MAGA is cooked the midterms will be a bloodbath; there is always hope that Trump will be sacked on the third Impeachment go around!.

Ginko Biloba
Ginko Biloba
7 hours ago

All theater. They’ll eventually bow down and vote for it.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Ginko Biloba

Someone gets it, theater.

David Heartland
David Heartland
7 hours ago

Still, we all know now for sure that BIDEN was brain-dead and his handlers were in Charge. We all know that Special K Kamala was a cackling idiot. BUT, would they have done THIS MUCH FINANCIAL DAMAGE this QUICKLY?

Ginko Biloba
Ginko Biloba
7 hours ago

Well David, I’d gladly replace the morons we have now for any of Biden’s handlers. Or are you not paying enough for gas yet?

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Ginko Biloba

Rumor had it Trump ran just for kicks and accidentally kicked hillary’s ass. That Melania was crying in the hotel room because this was unplanned and she did NOT want to be where she is.
Next is a toss up on why Biden won/stole the election. Some claim he was a place holder for Trump and during his tenure the fabric of US society was essentially shredded.
Then the Trump return, how WWE.
Toss up on the assassinations being real of faked. Yes someone dies but when you deal with people who only see you as a statistic they would consider it Collateral damage and the US is very good with that kind of stuff.
Now we enter the endgame of New World Order with BRICS+ being top dog and more culturally stable.
It will be decades before the dust settles and by then the US will be a far dumber society.
People forget the Canadians burned the Capitol to the ground in the war of 1812.
Or how rich folk treated striking mine workers.
Maybe check out what happened to the Pequod Indians.
The original story I read was the colonizers wanted the natives land and went to war. Some of the colonizers considered it a violation of thou shalt not kill. So the native men were branded WOLVES and drowned in the bay while the colonizers claimed the lands, women and children.
For more fun look up what happened to MOVE, or WACO.

David Heartland
David Heartland
7 hours ago

Come on now, let’s not take ANYTHING that ANY Politician (Defined as LIARS, CHEATS, LOBBY-MONEY BECKONERS, INSIDER-TRADERS, ASSHOLES, and FOKKERS) seriously. EVERYTHING said is a form of Grand-Standing.

Oh, sure, it makes for good Mish articles and all, but I am NO LONGER FALLING FOR THIS BULLSHIT from people like “Mr. Blood-Bath CALLER” –TED “GAY CRUISER.”

Albert
Albert
8 hours ago

It feels more and more like Trump has declared war on the American economy: it started with a plethora of on and off illegal tariffs; then a sudden stop to even the most beneficial immigration; then a stupid Middle East war that has sent energy prices soaring; at the same time, he is feeding enormous structural fiscal deficits that are threatening a fiscal crisis; and then there is the unprecedented corruption, grifting, and insider trading that undermines trust in economic rules and norms that were taken for granted. What’s next on his agenda?

Jon
Jon
6 hours ago
Reply to  Albert

Trump is just an idiotic rich kid who grew up to be a conman and grifter. He found his ultimate fantasy in your average Republican voter: the people of faith sending their last nickel to their rich pastor expecting God to give them prosperity. Losers all. Just wish they weren’t taking the rest of us down with them.

Arthur Orwell
Arthur Orwell
9 hours ago

If you’re right, and it certainly does look bad right now, one good thing to come out of this will be that the Jewish lobby will be thoroughly exposed. One hopes that the Americans don’t punish them the way the Germans did.

threeblindmice
threeblindmice
8 hours ago
Reply to  Arthur Orwell

Kindly distinguish between crazed supporters of Israel and our fellow Jewish citizens, the vast majority of whom play by the rules, pay their taxes and are, in every respect, fully American. I have plenty of criticism of Israel, but, please, even hinting at punishment of Jews should be beyond the pale of civilized conversation.

Creamer
Creamer
7 hours ago
Reply to  threeblindmice

Arthur is a disgusting blowhard who knows exactly what he wants. It doesn’t matter to him that Israel is tossing Jews in jail for being religious and refusing to fight, he wants them in a camp and has said so in the past. I don’t know why Mish lets him vomit in these comments.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Creamer

There is the whole raping men with rebar then having the populace protest FOR the rapists.

Creamer
Creamer
3 hours ago
Reply to  Wilbur Mercer

Now go look at the Jews in America that they keep out. Every Orthodox community hates the place and Israel hates them because they can’t tell them what to do, so they get people to hate Jews so they’re forced to come under Israeli control. Do some thinking here, who benefits most from having Jews driven under Israel’s thumb where they can’t protest?

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  threeblindmice

Jerry Seinfeld has been an outspoken and unwavering supporter of Israel since the onset of the war in Gaza, often facing intense public backlash, campus protests, and hecklers for his stance. His key statements and actions include: [1, 2]

  • Duke University Remarks (September 2025): At a student event for Israeli hostage families, Seinfeld strongly denounced the “Free Palestine” movement as antisemitic. He controversially likened the phrase to Ku Klux Klan rhetoric, stating: “Free Palestine is, to me, just… you’re free to say you don’t like Jews. Just say you don’t like Jews.”
  • Viral Selfie Interaction (February 2025): In a widely circulated video from New York, a bystander asked for a selfie and said “Free Palestine.” Seinfeld replied directly, “I don’t care about Palestine.”
Pedro
Pedro
9 hours ago

They are out of time to fix Trump’s many fiascos before the midterms, so they’re are freaking out

The democrats will probably snatch defeat from the jaws of victory nonetheless

What a mess

Rogerroger
Rogerroger
1 hour ago
Reply to  Pedro

Every body forgets the gerrymandering. Im worried when the voter roles got turned over they will combine with other data. Run it through ai and get a far more accurate map

Jack X
Jack X
9 hours ago

Tulsi was always an attention seeker, which side got the most attention is where she always was. Next it’ll be JFK jr, another snake.

Phil
Phil
9 hours ago
Reply to  Jack X

Tulsi was raised in the cult Science of Identity Foundation (SIF), lead by guru Siddhaswarupananda Paramahamsa ( formerly surfer Chris Butler ).


Cult members often join different cults after they become disillusioned. She switched to the cult of the MAGA.


I’m sure she will soon find another cult.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Phil

Mormons?

Avery2
Avery2
7 hours ago
Reply to  Jack X

JFK Jr is swimming with the fishes. It just wasn’t his turn.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Avery2

Arkancide.

JeffD
JeffD
9 hours ago

Trump’s approval fell 20% just due to the ridiculous assault on Iran with no goal or endgame. What an Epic Failure.

Phil
Phil
9 hours ago
Reply to  JeffD

Trump canceled his trip to Bedminster this weekend to stay in DC. Pentagon cancelled holiday weekend for senior staff. The US is either invading Cuba or attacking Iran. Or both n

Sentient
Sentient
8 hours ago
Reply to  Phil

Or some other as-yet-unnamed country. “Malta’s been ripping us off for years!”

Creamer
Creamer
7 hours ago
Reply to  Sentient

“I want a falcon and I want it NOW”

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Creamer

That would be Black Captain America.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Sentient

Somalia? Sudan?

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Phil

Hajj dude no Iran happening until after the 29th.

Jean
Jean
9 hours ago

There is no respect for this country. Nothing. Everything is a game, including the Constitution. Nothing has any value anymore. I guess America is great now.

I’m back robbyrob
I’m back robbyrob
9 hours ago
Reply to  Jean

If we are remembered at all, I fear it will be as object lessons of the folly of knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing.
Marcus Aurelius

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Jean

When could anything be trusted in the US?
Constitution was written to protect RICH WHITE MEN from TAXATION.
But the whole world is like that if one looks at History.
Rarely is the genpop taken care of before the rich and royals.

Feral Finster
Feral Finster
2 hours ago
Reply to  Jean

Respect can only be earned. This country does not earn respect.

I’m back robbyrob
I’m back robbyrob
9 hours ago

Is Trump trying to turn Texas blue?It won’t be easy for Democrats. But he endorsed the inferior candidate at the worst possible time.
https://www.natesilver.net/p/is-trump-trying-to-turn-texas-blue

Oleg Groznyo
Oleg Groznyo
7 hours ago

Talarico is leading Paxton in the polls. His campaign isn’t accepting money from AIPAC. That alone is reason enough to vote for him.

Wilbur Mercer
Wilbur Mercer
6 hours ago
Reply to  Oleg Groznyo

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/texas-democrat-wants-prison-camp-american-zionists

A San Antonio Democrat running for Congress has proposed turning a federal immigration detention facility into an internment camp for “American Zionists,” and that is only the beginning of what she has been saying out loud. Maureen Galindo, a candidate in Texas’ newly redrawn 35th Congressional District, faces a Democratic primary runoff next week against former Bexar County Public Information Officer Johnny Garcia.

I’m back robbyrob
I’m back robbyrob
9 hours ago

Trump’s Endgame Is SurrenderHe seems to hope to slip away without Americans noticing the magnitude of this defeat.

Trump’s Endgame Is Surrender – The Atlantic

MMchenry
MMchenry
9 hours ago

With the Tulsi story maybe it’s time to revisit the credo: “Stand for something or you’ll fall for anything.” One has to have a resolute moral compass.

Jean
Jean
9 hours ago
Reply to  MMchenry

That doesn’t mean anything anymore. It’s all about money and power.

Tony Frank
Tony Frank
10 hours ago

One can only hope that Congress will quit cowering and do what they should in the current challenging situation that is negatively impacting the US and other countries.

El Trumpedo
El Trumpedo
9 hours ago
Reply to  Tony Frank

Congress ultimately has no power to enforce anything, as we’ve seen with the Epstein files, huff and puff as they may.

Jean
Jean
9 hours ago
Reply to  Tony Frank

Good luck with that. Wasn’t Marjorie Greene part of Congress? She had to leave the country for safety. She’s now in Costa Rica.

Phil
Phil
9 hours ago
Reply to  Jean

Now she’s an immigrant.

Jack X
Jack X
9 hours ago
Reply to  Phil

Anti immigration at home but wants to be an immigrant when it suits her.

Jack X
Jack X
9 hours ago
Reply to  Jean

Didn’t she do what she’s complaining about to other congress women? She attacks them women & they had death threats, a year later it happened to her. She was the Grifter in Chiefs attack dog.

Jon
Jon
6 hours ago
Reply to  Tony Frank

Please don’t use the term “Congress”. Congress is controlled lock, stock and barrel by the GOP. It is only the GOP that is cowering.

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