Category: Uncategorized

  • Republicans respond to ‘slush fund’ controversy with easily discredited claims

    The day after the Trump administration unveiled its unprecedented $1.776 billion compensation fund, Donald Trump suggested to reporters that he had nothing to do with it.

    “I guess they made a settlement of some kind,” the president said on Wednesday. “I wasn’t involved.”

    That detached posture didn’t last. Less than 48 hours later, Trump published an item to his social media platform in which he boasted about his direct role “in allowing” the fund “to go forward.” The same online statement added that, with these taxpayer resources, “I am helping others.”

    The problem is obvious: Either the president was completely in the dark about an agreement he wasn’t involved in, or he personally allowed the initiative to advance as part of his commitment to magnanimity. It can’t be both.

    The contradiction was jarring, but it was hardly the only bogus claim surrounding the highly controversial initiative.

    Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama tried to defend the fund by arguing, apparently in reference to Jan. 6 rioters, “We are going to compensate people who were wrongly denied access to a lawyer.” In reality, all of the Jan. 6 rioters who were charged as part of the attack had defense counsel.

    Two days earlier, Tuberville, who’s currently running for governor in Alabama, also argued, as part of the same defense, “Hundreds of innocent patriots sat behind bars over this made-up witch hunt.” Such rhetoric might placate conservatives, but it doesn’t change the fact that the justice system took steps to hold Jan. 6 rioters accountable for their actions, which is the opposite of a “made-up witch hunt.”

    Speaking of GOP gubernatorial candidates floating bad arguments, Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida told Fox News that the $1.776 billion fund exists as an extension of the president’s silly lawsuit against the IRS.

    “The dollars are there because the IRS lost its case,” Donalds argued.

    Except, the IRS didn’t lose its case. In fact, it was well positioned to win its case before Trump voluntarily withdrew his own litigation. Donalds, just days after these developments, described an imaginary set of circumstances to a national television audience.

    Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis of New York told Fox Business that she believes “there are people who have been legitimate victims of weaponization under the Biden administration that deserve to be compensated.” She didn’t specify anyone by name, which was a familiar problem: Prominent GOP voices continue to argue that there were actual abuses (which they can’t identify) that led to actual victims (whom they also can’t identify).

    The entire rationale for taxpayer-funded checks, in other words, is based on nonsense and conspiracy theories that Republicans barely even try to substantiate.

    To be fair, there are plenty of Republicans who have voiced their opposition to the $1.776 fund — retiring Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina called the fund a “payout pot for punks,” which was both memorable and alliterative — and those intraparty criticisms matter.

    But so, too, do the GOP lawmakers trying to defend this corrupt gambit with talking points that collapse under minimal scrutiny.

    The post Republicans respond to ‘slush fund’ controversy with easily discredited claims appeared first on MS NOW.

  • Brian Geraghty Joins Chris Hemsworth & Taron Egerton In Matt Ross’ Thriller ‘Kockroach’

    EXCLUSIVE: Brian Geraghty has joined the cast of Matt Ross’ crime thriller Kockroach as it shoots in Australia. He joins an ensemble cast featuring previously announced Chris Hemsworth, Taron Egerton, Zazie Beetz, Alec Baldwin, and Rachel Sennott. The film is based on William Lashner’s novel of the same name and follows a mysterious outsider who rises […]

  • Zohran Mamdani promises watch parties for New York Knicks NBA finals

    New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) on Tuesday said the city will hold watch parties for the New York Knicks’ first trip to the NBA Finals this century.  “We’re going to have watch parties across this city. We’re incredibly excited about those watch parties,” Mamdani told reporters during an event on housing.  The mayor…

  • Spencer Pratt Claims Karen Bass Broke Election Laws Near Ballot Boxes

    Spencer Pratt is escalating his war with Karen Bass … accusing the Los Angeles mayor of illegally electioneering near ballot boxes. The mayoral candidate alleges Bass crossed a legal line by campaigning too close to ballot drop boxes during early…

  • It’s a new world. It’s the same Constitution. Republicans need to act like it.

    This is the May 26, 2026, edition of “The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe” newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday.

    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “No matter what your immigration status is, you shouldn’t be treated with anything less than dignity in this country.”

    —  

    New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill, who joined protesters outside Delaney Hall yesterday on the fourth day of a hunger strike by detainees 

    JOE’S NOTE

    “Anybody who’s present in the United States has protections under the United States Constitution.” 

    Those are the words of Antonin Scalia — the godfather of conservative jurisprudence — after being asked directly whether the Constitution applies to undocumented immigrants. 

    Scalia’s words, and the constitutional protections he spoke of, seem like relics from a different age. 

    Judges’ orders are now routinely ignored; senators attempting to tour GOP internment camps are pepper sprayed; children and parents are randomly swept up in raids meant to meet quotas and enrich favored contractors. 

    The Geneva Conventions guarantee the Red Cross access to enemy combatants during wartime. And yet U.S. governors, senators, and members of Congress who fund Trump’s internment camps can’t get inside to inspect the savage conditions. 

    New Jersey’s governor was blocked by ICE officials from inspecting an internment camp inside her own state. 

    Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey and Rep. Adelita Grijalva of Arizona have been blocked from entering internment camp doors time and time again. 

    Sen. Alex Padilla of California was tackled, handcuffed, and detained at a Department of Homeland Security press event when the Hispanic lawmaker dared to ask a question.

    These centers are black holes, with reports of human rights abuses filtering out much like the news of Hitler’s concentration camps started quietly spreading across Europe. 

    So the question remains: What are Republicans hiding from Americans? 

    Why won’t the president allow members of Congress to look inside? 

    Why won’t Republicans in Congress demand it? 

    Every GOP senator should remember they may soon be in the minority. It is in their own interest to defend their Democratic colleagues and the powers James Madison bequeathed to the First Branch. 

    As Chief Justice John Roberts told the Trump administration’s solicitor general: “It’s a new world. It’s the same Constitution.” 

    Republicans need to take both Roberts and Scalia’s words to heart. As another Supreme Court justice once noted, “Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.” 

    It’s time to let light inside Trump’s internment camps.

    CONSUMER CONFIDENCE COLLAPSES UNDER WEIGHT OF WAR

    Source: Gallup poll of 1,001 U.S. adults, conducted May 1-15, 2026; margin of sampling error: ±4 percentage points 

    ON THIS DATE

    On May 26, 1927, the Ford Motor Company ended production of the Model T — the car that Henry Ford built to “democratize the automobile.” In the process, Ford revolutionized manufacturing by creating the first moving assembly line. That innovation ushered in the modern age. 

    Bettmann/Getty Images

    WHAT THEY SAID

    John Kirby on Iran

    “Don’t underestimate the degree to which the Revolutionary Guard is willing to sustain pain. They don’t care about the economic pain felt by Iranians. They can drag this war out for as long as possible.” 

    Ben Rhodes on political compromise

    “If we’re going to live together as people with different interests and views, we have to start with compromise. We — the United States — are an idea, and we have transformed ourselves time and again.”

    Eddie Glaude Jr. on American identity

    “There’s a madness deposited at the heart of America, because it imagines itself as a beacon of freedom and as a white republic. We see that cycle happening over and over again — very clearly during America’s milestone anniversaries.”

    EXTRA HOT TEA

    $508,520

    — The amount you could make as an anesthesiologist in Washington state, per a map that shows the highest-paying jobs in each state. 

    DOUBLE SHOT: KNICKS SWEEP

    Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images, David Dee Delgado/Getty Images

    Knicks fans celebrate winning the Eastern Conference Championship against the Cleveland Cavaliers yesterday in New York City. The Knicks last reached the NBA Finals in 1999 and are seeking their first championship since defeating the Lakers in 1973.

    CATCH UP ON MORNING JOE

    The post It’s a new world. It’s the same Constitution. Republicans need to act like it. appeared first on MS NOW.

  • Woman shot outside Sheffield bar was innocent bystander

    The 30-year-old woman was on a night out to celebrate the bank holiday weekend, police say.

  • Consumer confidence collapses under weight of war

    This is an excerpt from the May 26, 2026, edition of “The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe” newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday.

    Source: Gallup poll of 1,001 U.S. adults, conducted May 1-15, 2026; margin of sampling error: ±4 percentage points 

    Last week, the White House rolled out a bright new idea to reduce grocery prices: loosening federal rules that require grocery stores to cut greenhouse gas emissions from refrigeration and air conditioning. As MS NOW’s Steve Benen writes:

    The New York Times reported that market analysts agreed that the administration’s move is likely to have little impact on prices, “which are elevated because of tariffs, extreme weather and soaring fuel prices since the start of the conflict in Iran.”

    The article quoted David Ortega, a food economist and professor at Michigan State University, who said, “This move is highly unlikely to produce any noticeable reduction in grocery prices for consumers. We’re talking about refrigeration, and that’s a very small share of the overall cost of food.”

    How small is “very small”? A NOTUS report pointed to per-customer savings of roughly $2 a year.

    That’s not $2 per visit to the grocery store, that’s $2 per year — which works out to roughly 4 cents per week.

    CATCH UP ON MORNING JOE

    The post Consumer confidence collapses under weight of war appeared first on MS NOW.

  • Pratt knocks LA mayor’s approach to homeless people, says Seattle would ‘welcome them’

    Los Angeles mayoral challenger Spencer Pratt on Friday blasted incumbent Mayor Karen Bass’s approach to addressing homeless people in the city while also suggesting that Seattle would “welcome them.” Pratt, a former reality TV star from MTV’s “The Hills,” claimed in an interview with ABC 7 Los Angeles reporter Josh Haskell that the city’s people…

  • RFK Jr. Double-Fists Snakes Having Sex

    RFK Jr. was having a Steve Irwin moment when he grabbed 2 black snakes, bare-handed … just as they were apparently in the process of getting it on! You see in the video he posted on Tuesday, from Dr. Oz’s house … the U.S. Secretary of Health…

  • On This Date: The last Model T rolls off the line

    This is an excerpt from the May 26, 2026, edition of “The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe” newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday.

    BETTMANN/GETTY IMAGES

    On May 26, 1927, the Ford Motor Company ended production of the Model T — the car that Henry Ford built to “democratize the automobile.” In the process, Ford revolutionized manufacturing by creating the first moving assembly line. That innovation ushered in the modern age. 

    CATCH UP ON MORNING JOE

    The post On This Date: The last Model T rolls off the line appeared first on MS NOW.

  • Gandalf, Picasso and MLK: Cultural references ground Pope Leo’s AI warning

    It took a little over a year for Pope Leo XIV to write more than 42,000 words of his first encyclical, which deals with the safeguarding of human dignity in the age of artificial intelligence.

  • Tony Hinchcliffe Fires Back At ‘C***’ Chelsea Handler After Kevin Hart Roast

    Tony Hinchcliffe is firing back at Chelsea Handler after she ripped him as a racist hack for telling a George Floyd joke at the Kevin Hart roast … and he’s calling her the c-word. The comedian sounded off on Chelsea on his live podcast, “Kill…