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Trump Says GOP Has a ‘Good Bench’ for 2028โ€”But Wonโ€™t Name a Successor Yet

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President Trump says Republicans are well-positioned for the futureโ€”and that the party has a deep lineup of potential leaders ready to carry the America First agenda into 2028.

In an interview airing Wednesday night on NewsNationโ€™s โ€œKatie Pavlich Tonight,โ€ Trump was asked whether he sees a clear successor who could continue his legacy in the White House.

โ€œI hope so,โ€ Trump said. โ€œAnd we certainly have a good bench. We have some very talented people.โ€

While the president acknowledged he has early favorites, he declined to name any one candidate this far out.

โ€œI do, but itโ€™s so early,โ€ Trump told Pavlich. โ€œI donโ€™t like to [say].โ€

Trump Highlights Key Leaders Driving the Agenda

When pressed for names, Trump pointed to the strength of his administration and the results his team is deliveringโ€”especially on issues central to Republican voters, including border security, economic recovery, and restoring Americaโ€™s standing abroad.

โ€œLook, we have great people,โ€ Trump said. โ€œIโ€™m not just talking about one or twoโ€”we have so many great people.โ€

Asked again who specifically stood out, Trump singled out several of the most prominent figures in his circle:

  • Vice President JD Vance, whom Trump credited with strong leadership and loyalty to the MAGA coalition
  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a familiar and experienced voice on foreign policy
  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who has been a key figure in Trumpโ€™s economic team

Trump also praised officials leading the administrationโ€™s crackdown on illegal immigration and security efforts:

  • Tom Homan, Trumpโ€™s border czar and a longtime advocate of tougher enforcement
  • Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who has taken a visible role in administration security priorities

โ€œI could name 20 people that are phenomenal,โ€ Trump added.

A Sign of Confidenceโ€”and a Message to Voters

Trumpโ€™s remarks are being read by many Republicans as a clear message: the GOP is not just a one-man movement. While Trump remains the dominant figure in conservative politics, his comments suggest the broader America First bench is expandingโ€”a sign of stability and staying power for the party beyond any single election cycle.

In recent years, Republican voters have increasingly prioritized candidates who will:

  • fight the administrative state rather than manage it
  • take border enforcement seriously
  • resist โ€œforever warโ€ foreign policy
  • challenge corporate-media narratives instead of courting them

Trumpโ€™s list reflects that shift and highlights Republicans who have gained credibility with the base through real governance and public-facing leadership.

Midterms: Republicans Eye a Comeback in 2026

The comments come as Republicans begin gearing up for the 2026 midterms following setbacks in last yearโ€™s elections. Democrats and their allied media have tried to portray those results as a long-term trendโ€”yet history suggests otherwise.

Trump himself addressed the challenge in an earlier Fox News interview, noting that the party in power โ€œalways losesโ€ seats in midterm elections. That pattern has been true for decades and reflects voter turnout dynamics and backlash politics more than any permanent realignment.

A new Emerson College poll shows Democrats leading a hypothetical generic ballot matchup at 48.1% to 41.7%, with 10.2% undecided. But Republicans caution that early pollingโ€”especially this far from Election Dayโ€”often fails to capture likely-voter turnout, local issues, and late-breaking shifts that typically determine midterms.

Bottom Line

Trump may not be naming a successor yet, but heโ€™s signaling something important: the Republican Party has depth, talent, and rising leaders ready to keep building on the movement voters started in 2016.

For Republicans focused on winning in 2026โ€”and holding the line against Democratsโ€™ spending agenda, cultural policies, and bureaucratic overreachโ€”Trumpโ€™s message was simple: the team is strong, and the fight isnโ€™t slowing down.


Machado Defends Giving Trump Nobel Prize

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By Kevin Payravi - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=179718533

Venezuelan opposition leader Marรญa Corina Machado defended her decision to present President Trump with her Nobel Peace Prize medal during a recent visit to the White House, calling it a gesture of gratitude from the Venezuelan people for U.S. support in their fight for freedom.

โ€œI already said what I meant and what it means to the Venezuelan people to present President Trump with our gratitude for what he has done,โ€ Machado told independent reporter Nicholas Ballasy on Capitol Hill.

Machado urges anti-communist unity in the Americas

Machado was in Washington this week meeting with lawmakers and rallying support for democratic movements across the region. Speaking to reporters, she called for the Western Hemisphere to be โ€œfree from communism,โ€ arguing that once Venezuela is liberated, the broader effort will continue.

After Venezuela is free, she said, โ€œwe will keep working and we will have a free Cuba and a free Nicaragua.โ€

โ€œThis is a historic moment and we wouldnโ€™t be here if it wasnโ€™t for yes, the commitment, resilience, generosity and courage of the Venezuelan people, but also because we have counted with the support, vision and courage of incredible leaders such as the president of United States, Donald Trump, and members of this honorable Congress,โ€ Machado told reporters.

A symbolic handoff: โ€œBolรญvarโ€ to the โ€œheir of Washingtonโ€

Machado presented the award roughly two weeks after U.S. military forces captured Venezuelan strongman Nicolรกs Maduro and transported him to New York to face criminal chargesโ€”an operation that stunned observers across the region and energized Venezuelans demanding democratic change.

Machado later explained that she told President Trump about a historic symbol of shared liberation between the U.S. and Latin America: a medal featuring President George Washington that Revolutionary War Gen. Marquis de Lafayette gave to Venezuelan revolutionary hero Simรณn Bolรญvar.

โ€œTwo hundred years in history, the people of Bolivar are giving back to the heir of Washington a medal, in this case the medal of the Nobel Peace Prize as a recognition for his unique commitment with our freedom,โ€ Machado said.

President Trump later shared photos from the Oval Office showing him holding the framed prize, with Machado standing beside him.

Nobel Committee pushes back, critics pile on

Not everyone praised the moment. The Norwegian Nobel Committee emphasized that while a physical medal can change hands, the Nobel honor itself does not.

โ€œRegardless of what may happen to the medal, the diploma, or the prize money, it is and remains the original laureate who is recorded in history as the recipient of the prize,โ€ the committee stated. โ€œEven if the medal or diploma later comes into someone elseโ€™s possession, this does not alter who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.โ€

Norwegian Labour Party politician Raymond Johansen criticized Trump for accepting the medal, calling it โ€œincredibly embarrassing and damaging.โ€ And Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) also took a shot at the president, saying Trump looked โ€œkind of silly.โ€

Trump and the Nobel: longstanding controversy

Trump has been openly vocal in the past about being passed over for the Nobel Peace Prize, especially after major foreign-policy efforts. He campaigned for it last October, before Machado ultimately won.

The president also linked the Nobel snub to his thinking about Greenland, according to a text exchange with Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stรธre.

โ€œDear Jonas: Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the United States of America,โ€ Trump wrote Stรธre.

Trump later softened his remarks while speaking Wednesday at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and subsequently announced a โ€œframeworkโ€ for a deal involving the Danish territory.

Barron Trump โ€˜Savedโ€™ Womanโ€™s Life With Heroic Call To Police

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A woman testified in an English court on Wednesday that Barron Trump โ€œsavedโ€ her life after he realized she was being violently attacked and immediately called police, according to multiple reports.

Metro UK reported jurors at Snaresbrook Crown Court in London heard a dramatic emergency call in which President Donald Trumpโ€™s son told operators, โ€œI just got a call from a girl I know. Sheโ€™s getting beaten up.โ€

According to testimony, Barron Trump contacted authorities after FaceTiming the young woman, a friend of his, expecting a normal call but quickly realizing she was witnessing an assault in real time.

โ€œI just saw a ceiling and could hear screaming. I could see a guyโ€™s head on the phone, and then the camera turns to her crying and getting hit,โ€ Trump told operators. The call was placed from the United States.

The Daily Mail identified the accused as 22-year-old Russian national Matvei Rumiantsev, who allegedly โ€œwas jealous of the Americanโ€™s relationship with the woman and flew into a rage when he tried to phone her earlier that evening.โ€

Jurors were told Rumiantsev later went to the womanโ€™s home and repeatedly punched her. Prosecutors also allege he kicked the woman in the stomach and used degrading language during the video call with Barron Trump, calling her a โ€œwhoreโ€ and a โ€œslut.โ€

During her testimony Wednesday, the woman praised Trump for acting quickly.

โ€œHe helped save my life,โ€ she said. โ€œThat call was like a sign from God at that moment.โ€

Jurors also heard an exchange between Trump โ€” who was reportedly 18 years old at the time โ€” and the police operator, who pressed him for details about his connection to the victim as officers were dispatched.

Here is that back-and-forth:

Operator: โ€œCan you stop being rude and actually answer my questions. If you want to help the person, youโ€™ll answer my questions clearly and precisely, thank you.โ€

Barron Trump: โ€œI met her on social media. Sheโ€™s getting really badly beat up and the call was about eight minutes ago, I donโ€™t know what could have happened by now.โ€

He added a moment later, โ€œSo sorry for being rude.โ€

Trump reportedly told authorities it took him a few minutes to locate the correct phone number for British police. He placed the call at 2:23 a.m. London time, or 9:23 p.m. ET.

Rumiantsev is facing serious charges, including assault, two counts of rape, intentional strangulation, and perverting a court of justice, according to The Daily Mail.

Trump Launches Board Of Peace

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President Donald Trump gestures to the crowd after delivering remarks at the House GOP Member Retreat, Tuesday, January 6, 2026, at the Donald J. Trump- John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)

President Trump and his administration on Thursday unveiled a new โ€œBoard of Peaceโ€ initiative aimed at rebuilding and stabilizing Gaza, rolling out the framework during the World Economic Forum in Davos with leaders from more than 20 countries โ€” a list that notably did not include many major European Union allies.

The White House said countries agreeing to join the board include Argentina, Belarus, Morocco, Vietnam, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kosovo, Hungary, Egypt, Turkey, Qatar, Jordan, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia, among others.

Still, the administrationโ€™s initial member list immediately drew pushback from at least one European country after Belgium was mistakenly included.

โ€œBelgium has NOT signed the Charter of the Board of Peace. This announcement is incorrect,โ€ Belgian Deputy Prime Minister Maxime Prevot wrote in a post on X. โ€œWe wish for a common and coordinated European response. As many European countries, we have reservations to the proposal.โ€

The confusion highlighted a broader challenge for the new initiative: while Trumpโ€™s team appears to be moving quickly to secure international backing, many European governments face legal or political hurdles that prevent them from signing on immediately โ€” even if they see value in the proposal.

Finnish President Alexander Stubb said in an interview with CBS News that Finland and other European nations may be unable to join at first because they need parliamentary approval.

โ€œOne is that this is an international organization which, basically, then needs parliamentary approval. So, you know, we are liberal democracies. We canโ€™t come here and say, โ€˜okay, hereโ€™s the statute,โ€™โ€ Stubb said.

Stubb also said European leaders want the effort more closely tied to the United Nations, reflecting a common preference among Western governments for U.N.-anchored peace and reconstruction missions.

โ€œThe other one is that we want to link it even more closer to the U.N. So I think, for instance, that the Gaza peace board is based on a U.N. mandate, which is really good. So now we just need to make sure that some of the other mandates can be put into the U.N. as well. But weโ€™ll see what the other Europeans do and what we do together. I think itโ€™s a good initiative,โ€ he said.

Trump, along with senior officials in his administration, presented the Board of Peace as a concrete attempt to move beyond endless diplomatic statements and toward a rebuilding plan for Gaza โ€” a territory devastated by war, with large-scale destruction to housing, utilities, and basic infrastructure.

In remarks and presentations shared during the ceremony, the administration laid out a vision that included major construction and investment proposals, including an airport, data centers, workforce housing and new tourist attractions along Gazaโ€™s coastline.

Jared Kushner, Trumpโ€™s son-in-law and a key figure in past Middle East diplomacy, spoke during the Board of Peace ceremony and showed slides illustrating phased redevelopment concepts and what the administration described as a โ€œmaster planโ€ approach.

Kushner argued that a long-term economic transformation is essential if Gaza is ever to have lasting stability, framing the plan as a way to create jobs, attract investment and give residents a real chance to build prosperous lives.

โ€œWe do not have a plan B,โ€ Kushner said. โ€œWe have a plan. We signed an agreement. We are all committed to making that agreement work. Thereโ€™s a master plan.โ€

Kushner added that he hopes Gaza can ultimately become a โ€œdestinationโ€ with strong industry and opportunity โ€œwhere people can thrive,โ€ echoing Trumpโ€™s longstanding push for economic development as a lever for peace.

The initiative comes at a moment when the Middle East remains under intense pressure from continuing conflict, rising humanitarian needs, and deep questions over Gazaโ€™s governance after the war. One of the central issues facing any reconstruction effort is who will administer Gazaโ€™s border crossings, security, public services, and economic recovery while preventing the territory from returning to instability or serving as a launchpad for future violence.

A Palestinian official named to the newly formed National Committee for the Administration of Gaza, Dr. Ali Shaโ€™ath, announced the reopening of the Rafah Crossing โ€” Gazaโ€™s main entry and exit point to and from Egypt. The Rafah Crossing has served as a critical route for aid delivery, medical evacuations, and civilian travel, and its reopening would mark a significant development for the enclaveโ€™s immediate humanitarian situation.

The Trump administration also signaled it expects the Board of Peace to expand beyond its initial signatories, pointing to internal legal procedures in other countries as one reason more allies were not yet included.

During the signing ceremony, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the administration anticipates additional nations will join as their governments complete domestic approval processes.

โ€œMany others who are going to join, you know, others either are not in town today or they have to go through some procedure internally in their own countries, in their own country, because of constitutional limitations, but others will join,โ€ Rubio said.

For now, the Board of Peace initiative is being positioned by the White House as a step toward a post-war pathway for Gaza, with Trumpโ€™s team betting that a mix of security guarantees, regional buy-in, and economic rebuilding can eventually change the trajectory of one of the worldโ€™s most volatile flashpoints.

Trump Gives Blunt Answer What Happens To Iran If Heโ€™s Assassinated

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President Donald Trump gestures to the crowd after delivering remarks at the House GOP Member Retreat, Tuesday, January 6, 2026, at the Donald J. Trump- John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)

In an interview broadcast Tuesday night, President Donald Trump delivered a blunt warning to Iranโ€™s ruling regime: any attempt on his life would be met with overwhelming retaliation.

Speaking with NewsNation host Katie Pavlich on โ€œKatie Pavlich Tonight,โ€ Trump said he has already ordered a devastating response if Iran follows through on threats made against him.

โ€œThey shouldnโ€™t be doing it, but Iโ€™ve left notification. Anything ever happens, the whole country is going to get blown up,โ€ Trump told Pavlich. โ€œOriginally, Biden should have said something, when they made a statement. We always said, โ€˜Why isnโ€™t Biden saying anything?โ€™ Because he didnโ€™t.โ€

Trump also criticized what he described as weakness from the Biden administration, arguing that failing to respond forcefully to foreign threats only emboldens Americaโ€™s enemies.

โ€œBut a president has to defend a president. If I were here, and they were making that threat to somebody, even, not even a president, but somebody, like they did with me, I would absolutely hit them so hard,โ€ Trump said. โ€œBut I have very firm instructions โ€” anything happens, theyโ€™re going to wipe them off the face of this earth.โ€

Iranian threats escalate against Trump

Trumpโ€™s comments came as Iranโ€™s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has posted multiple threatening messages about Trump on social mediaโ€”including imagery depicting the president in a coffin. Trump said those threats cannot be ignored, especially given Iranโ€™s long history of supporting terrorism and political violence across the Middle East.

To many conservatives, the threats underscore a larger pattern: Iranโ€™s theocratic leaders grow more aggressive when the United States appears unwilling to enforce red lines. Republicans have repeatedly argued that deterrence only works when America backs it with strength, resolve, and consequences.

Biden administration acknowledged IRGC assassination plot

Even under the Biden administration, the threat from Iran has been formally documented.

Bidenโ€™s Justice Department announced the indictment of a senior member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) on charges of conspiring to kill former National Security Advisor John Bolton in 2022. Prosecutors alleged that a confidential source was offered $300,000 to carry out the assassination.

For Republicans, the plot was more proof that Iran is not simply a hostile stateโ€”but a regime willing to target Americans directly, including former senior officials.

Trumpโ€™s stance: defend dissidents, punish brutality

Trump has previously warned Iran not to harm protesters who oppose the regime, threatening consequences if demonstrators were executed. While Iran did not hang those specific protesters, the regimeโ€™s security forces killed hundreds during the crackdown.

Conservatives have long viewed Iranโ€™s government as an oppressive theocracy that violently suppresses its own people while funding terrorist proxies abroad. Many Republicans argue the U.S. should side firmly with dissidents and freedom-minded citizens, not appease the clerics in Tehran.

Soleimani strike remains a defining moment

One of the most significant actions of Trumpโ€™s first term against Iran was the January 2020 strike that killed Qasem Soleimani, an IRGC commander widely viewed by U.S. officials as responsible for planning attacks on Americans and allied forces.

The strike was praised by many Republicans as a clear demonstration of deterrence: when Iran targets Americans, the United States responds decisively.

A major 2025 strike on Iranโ€™s nuclear infrastructure

The article also notes that in June 2025, the United States Air Force bombed multiple facilities in Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan connected to Iranโ€™s nuclear program, reportedly dropping as many as 14 GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators.

The operation involved a 37-hour flight by seven B-2A Spirit bombers and inflicted significant damage to Iranโ€™s nuclear capabilities with no American losses.

Vice President Vance And Second Lady Share Pregnancy Announcement

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    By Office of Vice President of the United States - @VP on X, Public Domain,

    On Tuesday, Vice President JD Vance and Second Lady Usha Vance shared they are pregnant with their fourth child.

    In a message shared on social media, Vance wrote, “We’re very excited to share the news that Usha is pregnant withour fourth child, a boy. Usha and the baby are doing well, and we are all looking forward to welcoming him in late July.”

    “During this exciting and hectic time, we are particularly grateful for the military doctors who take excellent care of our family and the the staff members who do so much to ensure that we can serve the country while enjoying a wonderful life with our children.”

    JD Vance and his wife Usha have three children: Ewan, Vivek, and Mirabel.

    In December, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt shared that she and her husband, Nick, are expecting a baby girl. The coupleโ€™s second child is due in May 2026, joining big brother Niko, who was born in July 2024.

    โ€œMy husband and I are thrilled to grow our family and canโ€™t wait to watch our son become a big brother,โ€ Leavitt told Fox News Digital. โ€œMy heart is overflowing with gratitude to God for the blessing of motherhood, which I truly believe is the closest thing to Heaven on Earth.โ€

    This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.

    Trump-Backed Congresswoman Launches Campaign To Challenge Senate Incumbent

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    President Donald Trump gestures to the crowd after delivering remarks at the House GOP Member Retreat, Tuesday, January 6, 2026, at the Donald J. Trump- John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)

    Rep. Julia Letlow (R-La.) announced Tuesday that she is launching a Republican primary challenge against Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), stepping into the race just days after President Trump publicly encouraged her to pursue a Senate run in Louisiana.

    In a two-minute launch ad, Letlow framed her campaign as part of a broader fight to defend conservative priorities in Washington.

    โ€œI have fought alongside President Trump to put America first, standing up for our parents, securing our borders, supporting law enforcement, rooting out waste, fraud and abuse that drives up inflation and fighting to fix an education system too focused on woke ideology instead of teaching,โ€ she said.

    Letlow argued that Louisiana Republicans want a senator whose votes are predictable when the stakes are highest.

    โ€œA state as conservative as ours, we shouldnโ€™t have to wonder how our senator will vote when the pressureโ€™s on,โ€ she continued, without mentioning Cassidy by name. โ€œLouisiana deserves conservative champions, leaders who will not flinch.โ€

    Watch:

    Cassidy responds after call from Letlow

    Cassidy confirmed the news on X, saying Letlow personally called him earlier Tuesday to share her decision to run.

    โ€œShe said she respected me and that I had done a good job. I will continue to do a good job when I win re-election,โ€ Cassidy wrote. โ€œI am a conservative who wakes up every morning thinking about how to make Louisiana and the United States a better place to live.โ€

    Cassidy has long presented himself as a policy-focused Republican, emphasizing issues such as fiscal restraint, energy development, and hurricane recovery, while also working within the Senateโ€™s institutional frameworkโ€”an approach that can play well with establishment GOP voters but has faced skepticism from grassroots conservatives in recent years.

    Trump signals support for Letlow

    Letlowโ€™s announcement followed Trumpโ€™s recent public praise of the congresswoman, where he encouraged her to make the jump to the Senate. In a Truth Social post, Trump described Letlow as a โ€œTOTAL WINNER!โ€ and said she โ€œhas ALWAYS delivered for Louisiana.โ€

    That backing immediately reshaped the race, positioning Letlow as the most prominent Republican challenger Cassidy has faced as he seeks another term. In a state where Trump remains highly popular among Republican primary voters, his involvement is likely to be one of the biggest factors in determining the outcome.

    A political fight years in the making

    Cassidy has been under heavy pressure from many pro-Trump activists since 2021, when he became one of seven Republican senators to vote to convict Trump during his impeachment trial following the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. The Senate ultimately acquitted Trump, but the vote left lasting consequences for Cassidy inside Louisiana GOP politics.

    What Letlow is betting on

    Letlow, who has represented Louisianaโ€™s 5th Congressional District since 2021, rose to national attention after winning a special election following the death of her husband, Rep. Luke Letlow, who died from complications related to COVID-19 shortly after being elected.

    Since entering Congress, she has worked to build relationships within the Republican conference while maintaining a strong conservative profileโ€”supporting border enforcement policies, opposing Democratic-backed spending packages, and highlighting cultural issues such as parental rights and education.

    Her campaignโ€™s early tone signals she plans to run as a Trump-aligned conservative focused on the top issues driving Republican voters in 2025: immigration, inflation, crime, cultural pushback in schools, and government accountability.

    New primary rules could raise the stakes

    The race will also unfold under Louisianaโ€™s new closed primary process, a change that could have major consequences. With a more Republican-only electorate participating, Cassidy may face an even more conservative and Trump-friendly primary environment than in previous cycles.

    That shift could make it harder for Cassidy to rely on crossover voters or independents who might otherwise support an incumbent known for policy work and institutional seniority.

    At the same time, a crowded field could still complicate the race. If multiple Republicans enter the primary and divide anti-Cassidy voters, Cassidy could benefit from winning a strong plurality of establishment conservatives, business-oriented Republicans, and voters who prioritize seniority and committee influence.

    A high-profile Louisiana showdown

    With Letlow officially in the race and Trump already signaling his preference, Louisiana is shaping up to host one of the GOPโ€™s most-watched Senate primaries this cycle. The contest will likely test whether Republican voters prioritize seniority and governing experienceโ€”or whether they want a more confrontational, Trump-aligned fighter in the Senate.

    For now, both candidates are claiming the conservative mantle. Letlow is promising a senator who will โ€œnot flinch,โ€ while Cassidy insists he remains โ€œa conservativeโ€ focused on improving life in Louisianaโ€”and says he expects to win.

    โ€œShe said she respected me and that I had done a good job,โ€ Cassidy wrote. โ€œI will continue to do a good job when I win re-election.โ€

    Congressman Calls To Remove Trump Via 25th Amendment

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      By The White House - https://www.flickr.com/photos/202101414@N05/54581054338/, Public Domain,

      Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) is calling for President Trump to be removed from office under the 25th Amendment after Trump said he would be less likely to pressure Denmark to give up Greenland had he won the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize.

      โ€œInvoke the 25th Amendment,โ€ Markey, who is facing a Democratic primary challenger this year, posted on social media, alongside an image of a New York Times report that said Trump tied his renewed interest in Greenland to not winning the Nobel Prize in a text message to Norwegian leader Jonas Gahr Stรธre.

      According to the Times, Stรธre received a text message from Trump on Sunday in which the president suggested that failing to receive the Nobel Peace Prize has made him more willing to take a tougher approach toward U.S. interests, including Greenland, which remains a territory of Denmark.

      โ€œConsidering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars Plus, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can think about what is good and proper for the United States of America,โ€ Trump wrote.

      The Norwegian Nobel Committee is a private organization and not part of the Norwegian government, although its members are appointed by Norwayโ€™s parliament.

      Rep. Yassamin Ansari, D-Ariz., asserted Monday in a post on X that President Donald Trump is “mentally ill” and should be “immediately” removed from office via theย 25th Amendment.

      “The president of the United States is extremely mentally ill and itโ€™s putting all of our lives at risk. The 25th Amendment exists for a reason โ€” we need to invoke it immediately,” she declared in the post.

      A familiar Democratic playbook

      Markeyโ€™s call is the latest example of Democrats escalating rhetoric about removing Trump from officeโ€”often after political disagreements or controversial headlines, rather than any clear constitutional crisis.

      Since Trump returned to office, several prominent Democrats and progressive allies have floated impeachment-related ideas, renewed investigations, and other efforts aimed at sidelining the president. While the circumstances and legal arguments have varied, the broader theme has remained consistent: using procedural threats and public pressure campaigns to weaken a president they were unable to defeat politically.

      Those efforts have ranged from calls for impeachment hearings to demands for special investigations and public claims that Trump is unfit to serveโ€”despite the fact that voters returned him to the White House and gave him a governing mandate.

      Since 2017, Texas Congressman Al Green (D) has attempted impeachment articles five times, often without the backing of House Democratic leadership. His previous filings โ€” including charges such as โ€œbigotryโ€ and โ€œbringing disrepute to the presidencyโ€ โ€” were consistently tabled with bipartisan support, underscoring how little traction his efforts gained even before Trumpโ€™s two formal impeachments in 2019 and 2021. (RELATED: Democrat Lawmaker To File Impeachment Articles Against Trump)

      However, even some Republicans have indicated they may soon support impeachment articles against Trump. (RELATED: Republican Issues Impeachment Warning Over Trumpโ€™s Greenland Proposal)

      Last week, Republican Congressman Don Bacon signaled he would move to impeach President Donald Trump if he follows through on his threat to invade Greenland and take it by force.

      In an interview with the Omaha World-Herald, Bacon (R-NE) said he personally would โ€œlean towardโ€ voting to impeach the president if he were to follow through on threats to take over Greenland.

      โ€œIโ€™ll be candid with you. Thereโ€™s so many Republicans mad about this,โ€ Bacon told the paper. โ€œIf he went through with the threats, I think it would be the end of his presidency.โ€

      What the 25th Amendment actually requires

      Despite Markeyโ€™s social media push, his demand to remove Trump from office is unlikely to gain traction.

      Invoking the 25th Amendment would require Vice President Vance and a majority of Trumpโ€™s Cabinet to formally declare to Congress that the president is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.

      That declaration would immediately transfer presidential authority to the vice president.

      The amendment then requires Congress to ratify any decision to keep the president out of power within 21 days of receiving the notification.

      Two-thirds of both the House and the Senate would need to affirm the decision. Otherwise, Trump would regain full presidential authority.

      Mexican President Pushes Back On Trump’s Latest Cartel Proposal

      By The White House - https://www.flickr.com/photos/202101414@N05/54581054338/, Public Domain,

      Mexicoโ€™s new president, Claudia Sheinbaum, says she had โ€œa very good conversationโ€ with President Donald Trump on Monday โ€” a call that focused heavily on cartel violence, cross-border drug trafficking, and the Trump administrationโ€™s push for tougher action against transnational criminal groups

      The call lasted about 15 minutes and came after Sheinbaum said she requested direct dialogue with the Trump administration, following a week of escalating rhetoric from Trump about the cartels and Mexicoโ€™s security crisis.

      A familiar dispute: U.S. military action vs. Mexican sovereignty

      Trump has repeatedly suggested the United States could use the U.S. military to strike cartel networks inside Mexico โ€” an idea that resonates with many Republican voters who view the cartels as a direct national-security threat tied to fentanyl deaths, human trafficking, and illegal immigration.

      Sheinbaum, however, again rejected the idea of U.S. intervention, signaling that her government wants continued security cooperation, but on Mexicoโ€™s terms.

      Trump โ€œstill insisted that if we ask for it, they could helpโ€ with military forces, Sheinbaum said, adding that she rejected the offer again:

      โ€œWe told him, so far itโ€™s going very well, itโ€™s not necessary, and furthermore there is Mexicoโ€™s sovereignty and territorial integrity and he understood.โ€

      For Republican-leaning audiences, the tension here is straightforward: Mexico wants U.S. support โ€” but not U.S. control, even as American communities continue facing the fallout of cartel-driven fentanyl trafficking.

      Trump presses the issue: โ€œThe cartels are running Mexicoโ€

      Trumpโ€™s posture has been consistent: treat cartels like the enemy force they are.

      In a Fox News interview aired last week, he said:

      โ€œWeโ€™ve knocked out 97% of the drugs coming in by water and we are going to start now hitting land, with regard to the cartels. The cartels are running Mexico. Itโ€™s very sad to watch.โ€

      That message plays to a key Republican argument: the U.S. cannot allow criminal organizations to operate with near-military power just across the border, especially when those groups fuel drug deaths and destabilize communities on both sides.

      Venezuela raid adds new weight to Trumpโ€™s threats

      The conversation also came in the wake of a dramatic U.S. operation in Venezuela โ€” the removal of Venezuelan President Nicolรกs Maduro โ€” which Sheinbaum said Trump raised directly.

      โ€œHe (Trump) asked me my opinion about what they had done in Venezuela and I told him very clearly that our constitution is very clear, that we do not agree with interventions and that was it,โ€ Sheinbaum said.

      Sheinbaumโ€™s comments reflect a longstanding Mexican government position against foreign military interventions, but the timing matters: the Venezuela operation has made leaders across the region take Trumpโ€™s warnings more seriously โ€” including when he talks about Mexico, Cuba, and even Greenland. AP News+1

      Rubio demands โ€œtangible resultsโ€ from Mexico

      The Trump administrationโ€™s pressure campaign hasnโ€™t been limited to the president.

      Mexicoโ€™s Foreign Affairs Secretary Juan Ramรณn de la Fuente spoke Sunday with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who called for โ€œtangible resultsโ€ and more cooperation to dismantle cartel power, according to the U.S. State Department.

      That demand reflects what many Republican voters have argued for years: Mexico must do more than make promises โ€” it must deliver measurable enforcement.

      Sheinbaum claims progress โ€” and wants credit

      Sheinbaum said Mexico shared results with the U.S. side, including:

      • a significant drop in homicides
      • falling U.S. fentanyl seizures
      • lower fentanyl overdose deaths in the U.S.

      Even so, U.S. officials and border-state Republicans have frequently questioned whether Mexicoโ€™s progress is durable and nationwide, or simply temporary or concentrated in certain regions while cartels continue adapting.

      Why intervention is still unlikely โ€” for now

      Experts say U.S. intervention in Mexico remains unlikely because Mexico is currently doing much of what Washington has requested and remains one of Americaโ€™s most important economic partners. But they also expect Trump to keep using hardline rhetoric to maintain pressure.

      Cuba left out โ€” but still a point of friction

      Sheinbaum said the two leaders did not discuss Cuba, even though Trump has recently threatened action related to the island. Mexico remains an important ally of Cuba, including through oil shipments, which have become even more significant now that the Trump administration has moved to stop Venezuelan oil from reaching Cuba.

      Trump Reveals First Lady โ€˜Hates When I Do Thisโ€™ In Public

        1
        First Lady Melania Trump participates in the Senate Spouses Luncheon at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., Wednesday, May 21,2025. (Official White House Photo by Andrea Hanks)

        President Donald Trump on Tuesday shared a lighthearted moment with Republican lawmakers, revealing that first lady Melania Trump is not a fan of his now-famous campaign rally dance movesโ€”though he made clear that voters seem to feel otherwise.

        Speaking at the House GOP Member Retreat at the Kennedy Center, Trump recounted conversations with the first lady about his tendency to dance onstage at political events, a routine that has become a signature feature of his public appearances.

        โ€œMy wife hates when I do this,โ€ Trump said, drawing laughter from the audience.

        โ€œSheโ€™s a very classy person, right? She said, โ€˜Itโ€™s so unpresidential.โ€™ I said, โ€˜but I did become president.โ€™ โ€ฆ She hates when I dance. I said, โ€˜Everybody wants me to dance.โ€™โ€

        Trump continued, quoting Melania Trumpโ€™s concerns about tradition and decorum.

        โ€œโ€˜Darling, itโ€™s not presidential,โ€™โ€ he said, recounting her words.

        The presidentโ€™s dancingโ€”often set to the Village Peopleโ€™s โ€œY.M.C.A.โ€ or Lee Greenwoodโ€™s โ€œGod Bless the U.S.A.โ€โ€”became a hallmark of his 2024 campaign rallies. Trump routinely opened or closed events by dancing on stage, usually making a fist, shimming his arms, and pointing toward supporters in the crowd. The moments frequently went viral online and were embraced by supporters as a symbol of Trumpโ€™s unfiltered personality and connection with everyday Americans.

        Trump has previously spoken publicly about Melania Trumpโ€™s disapproval of the routine. At a 2023 rally in Iowa, he told supporters she had warned him against dancing offstage.

        โ€œShe said, โ€˜Darling, I love you, I love you, but this is not presidential. You donโ€™t dance off the stage. This is not presidential,โ€™โ€ Trump recalled at the time.

        On Tuesday, Trump said the first lady had even invoked historical precedent, arguing that past presidents maintained a more reserved public image.

        โ€œShe actually said, โ€˜Could you imagine FDR dancing,โ€™โ€ Trump told lawmakers.

        Trump responded by acknowledging the contrast between eras, while still defending his approach.

        โ€œThereโ€™s a long history that perhaps she doesnโ€™t know because he was an elegant fellow, even as a Democrat,โ€ Trump said of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. โ€œHe was quite elegant, but he wouldnโ€™t be doing this. But nor would too many others.โ€

        Still, Trump emphasized that timesโ€”and politicsโ€”have changed, and that modern voters respond to authenticity more than formality.

        โ€œBut she said, โ€˜Darling, please, the weightlifting is terrible,โ€™โ€ Trump added, referring to another form of physical impersonation he sometimes uses onstage. โ€œAnd I have to say this, the dancing, they really like.โ€

        According to Trump, Melania Trump remains unconvinced that audiences genuinely enjoy the performances.

        โ€œShe said, โ€˜They donโ€™t like it. Theyโ€™re just being nice to you,โ€™โ€ he recalled.

        โ€œI said, โ€˜Thatโ€™s not right,โ€™โ€ Trump added.

        The comments came as Trump was discussing broader cultural and political issues, including his criticism of biological males competing in womenโ€™s sportsโ€”remarks that continue to resonate strongly with his conservative base. Trump has previously noted that the first lady also disapproves of his onstage imitations of weightlifters, which he has used to make points about strength, fairness, and gender differences.

        While Melania Trump may prefer a more traditional presidential image, Trump made clear that he believes his unorthodox approach is part of why millions of Americans continue to support him.

        As he put it plainly: the voters like itโ€”and heโ€™s not stopping anytime soon.