Category Archives: Republican Party

‘Yes I have!’ Trump throws a tantrum on Truth Social about critical New York Times report

‘Yes I have!’ Trump throws a tantrum on Truth Social about critical New York Times report

Robert Davis
March 21, 2026, 7:03PM ET (RAWSTORY)

President Donald Trump threw a tantrum on Truth Social on Saturday about a New York Times column that was critical of his strategy in the war in Iran.

The New York Times’s White House and National Security Correspondent, David Sanger, reported that Trump is “eyeing an exit” from the war in Iran but added that the president appears not to have “decided whether to take it.” Sanger’s report apparently didn’t sit well with Trump, who raged at Sanger personally in a new Truth Social post.

“The United States has blown Iran off of the map, and yet their lightweight analyst, David Sanger, says that I haven’t met my own goals,” Trump wrote. “Yes, I have, and weeks ahead of schedule!”

“Their leadership is gone, their navy and air force are dead, they have absolutely no defence, and they want to make a deal,” he added. “I don’t! We are weeks ahead of schedule. Just like their incompetent election coverage of me, The Failing New York Times always gets it wrong!”

Trump’s post was made at a time when his administration is facing considerable backlash for coordinating bombing strikes in Iran with Israel. The war appears to have sundered Trump’s MAGA coalition, and public polling suggests the war is deeply unpopular with voters.

https://www.rawstory.com/trump-2676536458/?utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Mar.22.2026_7.56pm

This MAGA maniac’s gang targeted me in my home — quitting Trump makes him no less scary

This MAGA maniac’s gang targeted me in my home—quitting Trump makes him no less scary

Tara Dublin
March 22, 2026, 5:30AM ET (RAWSTORY)

Don’t give Joe Kent any kind of a pass just yet, because he’s still MAGA. And he’s about to become even more dangerous than he already was.

The DNI was under a microscope on Wednesday in the wake of the unexpected resignation letter bombshell released by the director of the National Counterterrorism Centre, Joe Kent.

Tulsi “Hillary Told Us All About You” Gabbard was being grilled by the Senate Intelligence Committee and lied under oath yet again when being questioned by my senator, Ron Wyden (D-OR). Senator Chutzpah here is the embodiment of “speak softly and carry a big stick,” because he definitely stuck it to Tulsi.

It’s been fascinating to watch the MAGA reaction to Kent’s resignation unfold on Twitter, because Joe Kent wasn’t even on their radar before they were told what to say about him in their tweets.

The official message from the White House was, “Kent is a liar who was always weak on national security,” which is a weird thing to say about the person you hired to help oversee our national security. Another L for the world’s least successful businessman

Before Tuesday, Kent had been a MAGA darling and special favourite of Trump’s ever since they met at Kent’s wife’s Dignified Transfer in 2019, one of the few times Trump met the coffins of service people killed in action during his first term. Kent soon joined the Trump 2020 campaign and was a full-on America First MAGA mouthpiece, whom I dubbed “Rand Paul lite” early on thanks to their resemblance in both looks and disregard for the truth.

After Trump lost the 2020 election, Kent positioned himself to run for Congress in Washington’s 3rd District—where I lived from 2001 until 2022—to challenge then-Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-WA), who had fallen out of favour with Trump after she voted for his second impeachment. Herrera Beutler famously testified that she was with Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-FL, via Trump’s alimentary canal) in his office on January 6, 2021, when he called Trump at the White House and begged him to call off the MAGA crowd that was attempting to break into his office window.

“Well, Kevin,” Trump told him, “I guess some people are more upset about the election results than others.” And then hung up on him.

Ah, 2021, a time when Republicans quietly told the truth about Trump once he left office. That was a real thing that the media also fumbled back then.

In September 2021, I was writing for the now-defunct website Hill Reporter when I heard that then-Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) was being dispatched to appear with Joe Kent in Vancouver to boost his campaign. The full story has been archived, and once you’re done here, I’d appreciate it if you could take the time. But I’ll give you the Cliff’s Notes version here.

I’d arranged for an interview with both Gaetz and Kent for Labour Day via Kent’s campaign manager. We were set to meet at a coffee shop ahead of a planned private fundraiser, which would be followed by a rally at the Clark County Fairgrounds. The morning of the interview, I was told Gaetz wasn’t available, but Kent was still a go.

I was fully prepared, but Kent wasn’t ready for my competence. Kent, his tattoo sleeves partially covered by shirtsleeves even in the warm weather (SUS!), told me everything I needed to know about him by not answering the questions I asked him during our 40-minute interview, in which I repeatedly nailed him with these pesky things I brought with me called FACTS. We were only a couple of minutes in before he remarked, “Wow, I usually get softball questions.”

“Yeah, I don’t play softball,” I quipped.

My questions were enough for his campaign manager, who was furiously texting during the interview. Before the promised hour I’d arranged had elapsed, our conversation was cut short by Matt Braynard, a MAGA strategist and devoted J6er.

But I’d gleaned some very important info, mainly that there were already plans to challenge the results of the 2022 midterms, a full 14 months before a vote had been cast.

The fundraiser had been moved from a skate park (Matt Gaetz + teenagers = bad optics) to a private residence. Even though Kent had denounced the violence of January 6th in our interview, these were the kinds of bumper stickers on the cars of those who were welcome inside—unlike myself and my pal/bodyguard, Eugene.

https://www.rawstory.com/raw-investigates/joe-kent-trump/?u=119b60d179004daa4a11f0327e221740d541b54821cf8fbaf39e7e57f8b9f336&utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Mar.22.2026_1.11pm

Trump’s new tariff ‘shenanigans’ are about to hit another brick wall: report

Trump’s new tariff ‘shenanigans’ are about to hit another brick wall: report

Tom Boggioni
March 22, 2026, 8:44 AM ET

Any hope that the Donald Trump administration might have about dragging its feet and not refunding the tariff money the Supreme Court said was illegally collected is headed for a reality check, attorney Ray Brescia reported for MS NOW.

The Supreme Court designated the relatively obscure Court of International Trade to oversee implementation of its stunning February ruling on tariffs after the high court’s own decision left critical questions unanswered.

When the Supreme Court issued its landmark decision in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump last February, readers had to wade through seven separate judicial opinions totaling 170 pages to grasp that the court had invalidated sweeping tariffs imposed by the Trump administration under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Yet the decision sidestepped a crucial issue: how the administration would refund billions in illegal tariffs collected from businesses and consumers.

Rather than address this question directly, the Supreme Court returned the matter to the Court of International Trade, a body Congress created in 1980 to resolve disputes affecting international commerce.

What might have seemed like an opportunity for delays has instead produced an unlikely champion of accountability. Judge Richard Eaton has emerged as a formidable obstacle to any administration strategy of prolonging the litigation.

Rather than adopt the verbose, jargon-laden style common among legal authorities today, Eaton has demonstrated a masterclass in brevity and clarity. His straightforward approach leaves no doubt about the administration’s legal obligations and severely constrains its ability to evade restitution.

Eaton’s opinions have been exemplary in their judicial economy and efficiency, with no patience for bureaucratic delays, with Brescia writing that Eaton “appears to be holding the administration’s feet to the fire and does not appear like he is about to tolerate many shenanigans should the administration seek to drag those feet in an effort to evade the law.”

Constitutional law requires tariffs to be lawful, and the Supreme Court has confirmed this was not. Yet without enforceable remedies, such rulings become hollow. A seasoned judge operating from lower Manhattan—someone with decades of courtroom experience managing litigation tactics—has ensured the rule of law prevails through straightforward, decisive action.

Courts must function as meaningful checks on executive power abuses. Judges like Eaton, willing to clearly articulate what the law demands in accessible, concise language, prove essential to that constitutional role.

https://www.rawstory.com/trump-tariffs-2676571271/?u=119b60d179004daa4a11f0327e221740d541b54821cf8fbaf39e7e57f8b9f336&utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Mar.22.2026_1.11pm

 

Trump is ‘grappling with a lack of control’ as his plans go awry: Axios

Trump is ‘grappling with a lack of control’ as his plans go awry: Axios

Tom Boggioni
March 22, 2026, 7:42AM ET (RAWSTORY)

As Donald Trump’s war on Iran enters its 23rd day, the administration is putting out signals that it would like to begin peace talks at the same time that the president is raising the threat that he will destroy the country’s energy infrastructure within two days.

Appearing on MS NOW, to discuss the mixed messaging, Axios reporter Eli Stokols stated that the president is clueless about the best path to proceed down, and events on the ground—particularly the closing of the Strait of Hormuz—show no signs of being easily resolved.

Speaking with the hosts of “The Weekend, “ he explained, “Look, I think the president has been sort of all over the place. And I think the post overnight, with the threats, if they don’t, you know, open up the strait, we’re going to blow their power plants to smithereens; the president’s grappling with a lack of control. He started this conflict. He is not capable of ending it on his own.”

“Iran has a say here,” he observed. “And I think, you know, he’s frustrated about not getting more help from European allies, which, like, we all know why that is. And I think there’s a sense, as much as they are saying, ‘Well, we need $200 billion; we need all this money to keep this war going.’”

“There’s a clear sense that the president would probably like to wrap this up, but that doesn’t mean he can’t escalate if he gets frustrated,” Stokols predicted. “And so I think there’s a lot of uncertainty and incoherence in the strategy, because that reflects an uncertainty about how to proceed and what he can actually do to bring about an outcome that he’ll be happy with, a sort of clean ending to this war that he started.”

 

https://www.rawstory.com/trump-control/?u=119b60d179004daa4a11f0327e221740d541b54821cf8fbaf39e7e57f8b9f336&utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Mar.22.2026_1.11pm

Trump vows to make good on imminent ICE threat: ‘Tom Homan is in charge!’

Trump vows to make good on imminent ICE threat: ‘Tom Homan is in charge!’

Alexander Willis
March 22, 2026, 8:11AM ET (RAWSTORY)

President Donald Trump vowed Sunday to make good on his previous threat to deploy Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to airports nationwide in a fiery rant shared on social media.

“On Monday, ICE will be going to airports to help our wonderful TSA agents who have stayed on the job despite the fact that the radical left Democrats, who are only focused on protecting hard-line criminals who have entered our country illegally, are endangering the USA by holding back the money that was long ago agreed to with signed and sealed contracts and all,” Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social.

Trump’s threat comes amid the ongoing partial government shutdown, which began last month after Democratic lawmakers refused to fund the Department of Homeland Security without significant reforms to ICE in the wake of the agency’s violent immigration enforcement operations in Minnesota and elsewhere.

The shutdown has led to long lines at airports as Transportation Security Administration officials—who work under DHS—have started to miss paychecks. Trump’s solution, which he first proposed on Saturday, was to deploy ICE agents to help fill staff shortages.

“But watch, no matter how great a job ICE does, the Lunatics leading the incompetent Dems will be highly critical of their work,” Trump continued. “THEY WILL DO A FANTASTIC JOB. The great Tom Homan is in charge!!!”

https://www.rawstory.com/trump-2676570842/?utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Mar.22.2026_1.11pm

Trump’s threat met with dire warning: ‘Price of oil will remain high for a long time’

Trump’s threat was met with a dire warning: “The price of oil will remain high for a long time.”

Alexander Willis
March 22, 2026, 7:33 AM ET (RAWSTORY)

President Donald Trump’s demand Saturday that Iran “fully open” the Strait of Hormuz by Monday night was rebuffed Sunday morning by Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, who not only appeared to dismiss Trump’s open threat but also issued one of his own.

Following the United States’ surprise attack on Iran last month, the Middle East nation has denied U.S.-aligned ships access to the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial shipping route through which a fifth of the world’s oil trade flows, sending oil prices soaring and reportedly sparking panic within the Trump administration.

On Saturday, Trump took to social media to demand Iran allow U.S.-aligned ships to pass through the shipping channel “within 48 hours,” warning that if his demand were not met, the United States would “obliterate their various power plants, starting with the biggest one first”—a potential war crime.

Despite the gravity of Trump’s threat, Ghalibaf appeared to dismiss the warning and went on to issue one of his own.

“Immediately after the power plants and infrastructure in our country are targeted, the critical infrastructure, energy infrastructure, and oil facilities throughout the region will be considered legitimate targets and will be destroyed in an irreversible manner, and the price of oil will remain high for a long time,” Ghalibaf wrote in a social media post on X Sunday morning, according to a translation of the original post written in Farsi.

“And throw down what is in your right hand; it will swallow up what they have made.”

Increasing oil prices have reportedly led to Trump looking for a way out of the conflict he initiated; however, such an off-ramp may not exist, according to at least one former Trump security advisor. Iran has also vowed to keep fighting in response to the U.S.-Israeli attack.

 

https://www.rawstory.com/iran-war-2676569841/?u=119b60d179004daa4a11f0327e221740d541b54821cf8fbaf39e7e57f8b9f336&utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Mar.22.2026_1.11pm

 

Trump’s War With Iran Is a Product of His Deep Stupidity There’s a simple and obvious reason we’re in this mess.

Trump’s War With Iran Is a Product of His Deep Stupidity
There’s a simple and obvious reason we’re in this mess.

By Jason Linkins (TNR)

What can be said about Trump’s war with Iran that isn’t already abundantly obvious? The answer: not much. It is not going well, and it probably won’t end well. But having spent time in the salt mines of Trump punditry, I can tell you that we’re going to endure a difficult round of think pieces purporting to explain How This Happened. So maybe this is the best time to assert the obvious, using my favored rubric of Trump analysis: Imagine if the dumbest person in the world and humanity’s biggest asshole were the same person, and that guy was president. Then imagine he started a war with Iran. Now check the news. One look, and here’s what you should be thinking: “Yep, that tracks.”

As with all of Trump’s presidential exploits, success is always constrained by two factors: The aforementioned sharp limitations of his intellectual capabilities and the fact that he is perpetually surrounded by an inner circle made up of clowns somewhere on the spectrum between “rampantly evil” and “thoroughgoing dipshit.”

“Why did President Trump decide to attack Iran?” The Atlantic’s Yair Rosenberg recently mused. “It depends on what day of the week you ask,” On some days, Trump was acting on (roundly discredited) intel that Iran was on the verge of acquiring nuclear weapons. On others, there is a scent of regime change in the air. Sometimes we are told that we were doing a classic “leading from behind” manoeuvre, trailing Israel into a conflict it’s long sought. Frankly, I give a lot of credit to the “wag the dog” scenario: With the economy in shambles and Jeffrey Epstein riding high in the headlines, Trump needed a distraction. Also, we mustn’t forget that he’s a warmonger who just thinks it’s fun to blow things up. (For Iran War Stupidity completists, Popular Information’s Judd Legum has rounded up 17 separate and frequently contradictory reasons that the administration has submitted for our approval.)

I’ve been reading the comment sections (of the Financial Times, anyway), and Trump is getting his ass roasted: “Let me get all of this straight in my head. They want their allies to join in an ill-thought-out war of choice with unclear aims and an uncertain chance of success for any of the myriad aims stated so far. They want everyone else to just absorb any of the externalities, like influxes of refugees, disruptions to shipping, higher oil and commodity prices, and maybe even some incoming missiles. And then they also want to tariff everyone at 15 percent.” Brother, you seem confused, but you got it absolutely correct.

Trump is really going through it with the nations that were once, putatively, our allies before Trump launched a trade war with all of them and threatened to seize Greenland in an act of colonial conquest. In the space of days, Trump has gone from begging for European naval support to free the Strait of Hormuz to having those requests punted back in his face to spiralling out on Truth Social about how he didn’t actually need anyone’s help in the first place. Since then, he’s petulantly suggested that he might wreck the whole shop and leave the nations that rebuffed him to clean up the mess. Meanwhile, countries like France and Italy are simply working on side deals with Iran to be allowed to use the strait.

My colleague Heather Souvaine Horn recently expressed to me how maddening it is to see the Trump administration treat Iran’s clampdown on the Strait of Hormuz as if it’s some unfair trick the Iranians pulled and not one of the most singularly obvious strategic choices the regime could make under the circumstances—the other being Iran’s decision to attack other Gulf states, knowing that it would be a pain point for the U.S. both economically and diplomatically. But by Trump’s own admission, the very fact that Iran retaliated in any way has caught him completely flat-footed. “They weren’t supposed to go after all these other countries in the Middle East,” he told reporters on Monday. “They hit Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, and Kuwait. Nobody expected that. We were shocked!” Right now, there are 13-year-old kids about to invade Kamchatka in their first-ever game of Risk that look like Carl von Clausewitz compared to Trump.

This week, The New Republic’s Alex Shephard wrote that it will be Iran, not Trump, that dictates when and how this conflict ends. At least one anonymous administration official concurs, telling Politico that Iran’s leaders “hold the cards now.” “They decide how long we’re involved—and they decide if we put boots on the ground. And it doesn’t seem to me that there’s a way around that, if we want to save face.” Sounds great. Until then, if you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a rake—forever.

https://newrepublic.com/post/207989/trump-war-iran-cause-stupidity?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=the_soapbox_rss&utm_term=tnr-newsletter-20240825

This Is How Forever Wars Begin First, with lies and bombs. Then, with a request for hundreds of billions in taxpayer dollars. Will Congress cave to the White House yet again?

This Is How Forever Wars Begin
First, with lies and bombs. Then, with a request for hundreds of billions in taxpayer dollars. Will Congress cave to the White House yet again?

By Alex Shephard (TNR)

In the final year of President George W. Bush’s second term, his administration asked Congress for $190 billion to continue funding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that had long since turned into quagmires. On Wednesday, the Pentagon asked the White House for $200 billion to fund the war on Iran, which is not even three weeks old.

That amount doesn’t go as far as it did two decades ago, of course, but it nonetheless says a lot about what the Trump administration is planning in Iran. The Pentagon thinks it needs roughly as much money as it cost to fight a year of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars—indeed, adjusted for inflation, $200 billion is more or less what President Obama proposed for those wars in 2009.

Why does the Pentagon need that much money? Just last week, Trump said the war was “very complete” and that we had “won,” albeit with a sizable asterisk: We still had to “finish the job,” he said. So what does finishing the job in Iran entail? It’s a rhetorical question because it’s clear that the administration doesn’t know. The more interesting question at this moment is whether the Republican-controlled Congress, which is about to be put on the spot over the war, will force the administration to provide a concrete answer.

Trump and his “secretary of war,” Pete Hegseth, have said plenty about the war, but their statements have been vague, geopolitically illiterate, unhinged, sociopathic, and increasingly desperate—sometimes all at once. But one can glean a handful of potential objectives: The demise of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard; the elevation of a political leader deemed “acceptable” by the U.S., Israel, and the Gulf States; the permanent end of an Iranian nuclear program that the administration claimed to have obliterated last June; and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, the vital shipping canal that transports roughly 20 percent of the world’s oil supply, which has been functionally closed this month.

That’s a pretty big job—and it’s one that does not appear to be going very well right now. The U.S. has killed dozens of Iranian military and political leaders, including its supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but Iran seems no closer to capitulating. Indeed, it has subsequently issued its own set of objectives, which are much clearer than those the U.S. is fighting over and which include a new security arrangement with its neighbours—a considerable escalation.

The IRGC is still firmly in power; Khamenei was replaced by his hard-liner son; and gas and oil prices are spiking worldwide thanks to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and, on Thursday, an Iranian strike on a Qatari facility that produces 3 percent of the world’s liquid natural gas—a strike estimated to set back production for three to five years.

The spike in energy prices has already led the U.S. to lift sanctions on Russian oil. Indeed, one could argue that Vladimir Putin is the big winner thus far of the war, which has further damaged the credibility of the U.S. and the transatlantic alliance, as well as distracted from diplomatic efforts to end Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine. And now, the United States is mulling lifting sanctions on Iranian oil—not exactly the kind of move you’d expect from a country allegedly on the brink of a military victory.

“Two countries that we’ve spent years sanctioning are now the direct beneficiaries of a conflict the United States chose to start,” Brett Erickson, managing principal at Obsidian Risk Advisors, told The Washington Post. “The United States has spent years building sanctions architecture specifically designed to constrict Russia and Iran. Within three weeks of this conflict starting, we’re tearing it to shreds. That is not a short-term adjustment; it’s a complete strategic collapse.” That more or less sums it up.

Trump insists that the war will end whenever he says it does—when he “feels it in his bones”—but that it will probably be quite soon. His administration talks of the fight in terms of weeks, not months—and certainly not years. But you can’t fund a war with late-night social media screeds or unhinged press conferences. Wars cost money, and the $200 billion figure tells us that the war is not going well. It also tells us that the administration is lying.

Right now, the war is being waged via massive airstrikes and assassinations. Whether or not the Pentagon is gearing up for something analogous to Iraq—boots on the ground, a conflict that drags on for years, or both—is not clear, though the size of its budget request certainly suggests a conflict that is far from “very complete.” And Reuters reported late Thursday that the administration “is considering deploying thousands of U.S. troops to reinforce its operation in the Middle East”—and to secure the Strait of Hormuz, which, two U.S. officials acknowledged to the outlet, “could also mean deploying U.S. troops to Iran’s shoreline.”

This war was started without any meaningful attempt to persuade the public of its necessity. It was also started, unconstitutionally, without congressional approval—but that only seems to bother the Democrats. GOP Senator Rand Paul led an effort in the Senate on Thursday to require such approval to continue the war; it failed by a 47-53 vote, with Paul the only Republican voting in favour. But this isn’t the last they’ll be asked to weigh in on the war, if indeed the administration goes to Congress with its $200 billion request. GOP Senator Susan Collins said the figure was “considerably higher than I would have guessed,” while her Republican colleague Lisa Murkowski said, “You just can’t come up here with an invoice and say, you know, ‘pay this’ and expect to have great cooperation going forward.”

It’s possible that in this critical election year, many Republicans do not want to “approve” the war because doing so would mean taking responsibility for it. For now, this is Trump’s war, not theirs. But approving $200 billion, or even a smaller figure, would be congressional authorization by another name, at least in the eyes of the public. An appropriations fight will be a test of the seriousness of Democratic opposition and Republican support; it will also be a test of congressional seriousness itself. This war is unpopular, aimless, and illegal—and the Trump administration is preparing to ask for enough money to fund it for many months to come. If Congress can’t hold the line here, with a new forever war in the offing, then when ever will they?

https://newrepublic.com/article/208007/iran-forever-war-trump-200-billion?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=the_soapbox_rss&utm_term=tnr-newsletter-20240825

Trump Accidentally Reveals What He Really Thinks of MAGA Voters To be a member of MAGA in good standing, you must forget Trump’s promise of “no new wars,” and instead believe whatever he tells you to believe at any given moment.

Trump Accidentally Reveals What He Really Thinks of MAGA Voters
To be a member of MAGA in good standing, you must forget Trump’s promise of “no new wars” and instead believe whatever he tells you to believe at any given moment.

By Greg Sargent (TNR)

It’s become a stock social media joke to point out that MAGA stands for whatever Donald Trump says it does at any given moment, but now Trump himself has essentially confirmed the point. Faced with a battle among MAGA influencers over his attack on Iran, Trump unleashed a harsh broadside against some of the dissenters.

“THEY ARE NOT MAGA, I AM,” Trump raged on Truth Social, adding that MAGA entails “not allowing Iran, a sick, demented, and violent terrorist regime, to have a nuclear weapon.”

In short, anyone who dissents from Trump’s war of choice—anyone who points out that the invasion contradicts his longtime promise of “no new wars”—faces potential excommunication from the MAGA movement. The contempt this shows for the aspirations and fears of ordinary voters who happened to pick Trump in 2024—and might have legitimate worries about the Iran war—is basically boundless.

The immediate target of Trump’s fury was podcaster Megyn Kelly, who opposes the war and is feuding with pro-war Fox News host Mark Levin. Kelly and others, like Tucker Carlson and the non-MAGA Andrew Sullivan, oppose the war as doing Israel’s bidding. The battle has gotten vicious, with Kelly deriding Levin as “Micropenis Mark” and pro-war voices like Ben Shapiro slamming Kelly as an “unbelievable coward.” MAGA debates unfold at a lofty level.

This conflict among influencers primarily involves MAGA voices turning against the America-Israel alliance. It seems less focused on the general suspicion of foreign entanglements—and anger at elites who brought us the Forever Wars in the Mideast—that supposedly drives MAGA.

To be sure, those anti-interventionist leanings have long been overhyped. Yet some swaths of MAGA do at times appear to harbour such views. In a bombshell, Joe Kent, the director of the National

Counterterrorism Centre, just resigned his post over the war. Kent, an extremist with vile views, did cite Israel’s influence as a key reason, but he also declared that “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation,” adding: “I cannot support sending the next generation off to fight and die in a war that serves no benefit to the American people.”

It’s noteworthy that a MAGA diehard like Kent directly contradicted Trump’s claims about the Iran threat and the benefits of attacking Iran—while warning of exactly the sort of quagmire that Trump supposedly opposes. The way Kent blamed Israel in his letter was certainly ugly; a big motivator of some of these critiques is antisemitism. But we can distinguish between the likes of Kent and Carlson and their followers. Clearly some segments of their audiences genuinely oppose wars of choice.

Trump and his advisers have responded to this by simply writing the “no new wars” pledge out of the MAGA story. In suggesting that critics of the war on Iran “ARE NOT MAGA,” Trump also declared that “MAGA is about stopping them cold” before they get a nuke to “blow up” the United States and “the world.”

Note that this simply erases any debate over whether Iran’s nuclear ambitions actually constituted a dire enough threat to America—and the world—to justify our attack. Trump’s own intelligence officials have privately said they did not, and this now includes Joe Kent saying so publicly, whatever his twisted motivations. But in Trump’s formulation, anyone who harbours doubts about the threat Iran posed is commanded to accept it as a settled question. Because Trump said so.

“President Trump is the leader of MAGA,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt similarly insisted recently. “And there is nothing more ‘America first’ than taking out terrorists.” This again treats it as unassailably true that the war actually does constitute doing what’s urgently needed to combat terrorism. It suggests the only people the war is killing are terrorists, whereas it has likely killed over a thousand Iranian civilians.

But the “leader of MAGA” has decreed that the war is only killing “terrorists.” Being “MAGA” requires robotically accepting this as truth.

That’s just not sustainable. To see why, just look at the gyrations of JD Vance. Asked this week to reconcile his support for Trump’s war with his long-stated suspicions of previous foreign entanglements, Vance said: “One big difference is that we have a smart president, whereas in the past, we’ve had dumb presidents.” Trump, said Vance, will avoid the “mistakes of the past.” Vance has also said, “Now we have a president who knows how to accomplish America’s national security objectives” and won’t get sucked into “some long, drawn-out thing.”

Vance’s argument, then, is that the “smart” Trump has defined a precise objective—the dismantling of Iran’s nuclear program, as Vance puts it—and is now using overwhelming force to accomplish this immaculately. Trump will get out before falling victim to the sort of quagmire that befell “dumb presidents.”
But this is not faithful to Vance’s previous positions, no matter how hard he tries to make it so.

You cannot overstate how central suspicions of foreign entanglements have been to Vance’s political identity as a champion of working-class heartlanders abandoned by “elites.” Central to this has been the idea that these wars were not worth their cost in lives and treasure and thus were sold with “lies.”
Vance, for instance, marked the 20th anniversary of the Iraq invasion with a solemn declaration. “The war killed many innocent Iraqis and Americans,” he said, noting that “it cost over $1 trillion” and thus was an “unforced disaster.”

Now contrast that with Vance’s current stance. He only purports to evaluate Trump’s war based on whether it’s accomplishing a precise aim—disabling Iran’s nuke ambitions. But Trump’s official rationales have lurched in all directions, and what’s missing now is any wrestling with whether the supposed benefits we’re gaining are worth what we’re sacrificing.

They plainly are not. Our own intelligence officials didn’t see Iran’s nuclear program as anything like the threat Trump proclaims. The war cost over $11 billion in its first week. It has killed over a dozen Americans and apparently over a thousand Iranian civilians, many of them children. Vance expressed concern about the Iraqi dead in evaluating that catastrophe. What does he say about Iranian civilians now?

What about the financial burdens? What about the global consequences of the choked-off Strait of Hormuz, let alone what will be required to reopen it?
Vance—who used to talk about the costs of foreign wars, posing as a kind of Avenger of the Abandoned Heartland—should be pressed to account for all of it.
Then there’s the official lying. As Damon Linker notes, the Iran war echoes many of the broader foreign policy establishment’s previous world-historical errors. The lies, hubris, and folly of the old elites were central to Vance’s case against them. But this war, too, was sold on lies about the Iran threat—and in its catastrophic planning failures, it too has been marked by hubris and folly. What does Vance have to say about all that?

Trumpworld’s redefinition of MAGA is a farce. Not just in the hands of Trump and Leavitt, but also in the hands of Vance, who is recasting it almost as crudely. It’s hard to know what’s more galling—the brazen shamelessness of this effort, or the naked contempt it shows for the voters who are obviously expected to simply roll over and unthinkingly accept it.

 

https://newrepublic.com/article/207870/trump-maga-voters-joe-kent?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=the_soapbox_rss&utm_term=tnr-newsletter-20240825

Trump’s ‘disgusting’ celebration of Robert Mueller’s death sparks immediate backlash

Trump’s ‘disgusting’ celebration of Robert Mueller’s death sparks immediate backlash

Alexander Willis
March 21, 2026, 2:34PM ET (RAWSTORY)

Within minutes of news breaking Saturday of former FBI Director Robert Mueller’s passing, President Donald Trump took to social media to celebrate his death in a shocking social media post, sparking immediate backlash from critics who called the president’s language “disgusting and despicable.”

“Robert Mueller just died. Good, I’m glad he’s dead,” Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social.

The remarks were immediately met with scorn from critics of all stripes, including prominent liberal political commentator Ed Krassenstein, who went on to lavish praise on Mueller for his role in leading the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.

“This is disgusting and despicable,” Krassenstein wrote to their more than 1 million followers on X. “Trump literally just celebrated Robert Mueller dying. Mueller did so much good for America.”

Ken Dilanian, a justice and intelligence correspondent for MS NOW, responded to Trump’s remarks by making an unflattering comparison between the president and Mueller.

“In an era when many young men—including President Trump—were trying to avoid serving in Vietnam, Mueller not only volunteered for the Marines after graduating from Princeton—he spent a year waiting for an injured knee to heal so he could serve,” Dilanian wrote in a social media post on X. “I have always found that to be the most compelling fact about him.”

Trump infamously received a deferment from conscription in 1968 during the Vietnam War, a deferment that allowed the then-22-year-old future president to avoid military service. Furthermore, the deferment—a medical exemption citing alleged bone spurs in his heels—was issued to Trump by a podiatrist who rented office space from Trump’s father, a connection that led The New York Times to theorize that the medical diagnosis may have been “granted as a courtesy to the elder Mr. Trump.”

Others, like Fox Sports analyst Ryan Satin, pointed to what they characterized as Trump’s double standard, having belittled Mueller’s death openly while his own administration has vowed to pull visas and deport people who joke about the death of right-wing influencer Charlie Kirk.

“Remember when they made a database of people who said anything slightly deemed as negative about Charlie Kirk?” Satin wrote in a social media post on X.

https://www.rawstory.com/robert-mueller-2676525584/?u=119b60d179004daa4a11f0327e221740d541b54821cf8fbaf39e7e57f8b9f336&utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Mar.21.2026_7.57pm