By Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) - Director Wray Installation Ceremony, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=63667603
The election of Donald Trump in November 2016 was, for the entrenched political class, a thunderclap. It was not supposed to happen. The experts, the pollsters, the seasoned operatives had assured the country that Hillary Clintonโs victory was inevitable. Yet by the morning of November 9, the White House was preparing to receive a president unlike any in modern history: a political outsider with no government experience, an instinctive distrust of Washington, and a willingness to discard its conventions. For some in the outgoing administration and the permanent bureaucracy, this was not merely a surprise. It was a crisis to be managed, or better yet, undone.
That undoing began in earnest just four months into Trumpโs presidency, when Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe, with the approval of FBI Counterintelligence chief Bill Priestap and General Counsel James Baker, authorized a criminal investigation into the sitting president of the United States. This probe did not arise from fresh evidence of presidential misconduct. It rested on the same thin reeds that had underpinned the Russia collusion narrative since mid-2016: opposition research paid for by the Clinton campaign, laundered through the Steele dossier, and presented as intelligence. It was a case study in how partisan disinformation can metastasize into official action when it finds a willing audience inside the government.
To understand how extraordinary this was, one must appreciate the context. Intelligence reports later declassified in the Durham Annex revealed that, as early as March 2016, the Clinton campaign had hatched a plan to tie Trump to Russian operatives, not as a matter of national security, but as an electoral tactic. These plans were known to senior Obama administration officials, including John Brennan, James Comey, and Andrew McCabe, before the election. Yet when Trump won, the machinery they had assembled did not wind down. It shifted purpose: from preventing his election to destabilizing his presidency.
The first casualty in this internal campaign was Michael Flynn, Trumpโs National Security Adviser and one of the few senior appointees with both loyalty to Trump and an understanding of the intelligence communityโs inner workings. In late January 2017, Acting Attorney General Sally Yates, an Obama holdover, warned the White House that Flynn had misled them about conversations with the Russian ambassador. The FBI had already interviewed Flynn, in a meeting arranged by Comey that bypassed standard White House protocol. Even Peter Strzok, one of the interviewing agents, admitted they did not believe Flynn had lied. Nevertheless, the incident was used to force Flynnโs resignation on February 13, with Vice President Pence publicly citing dishonesty over sanctions discussions. In hindsight, it is clear this was less about Flynnโs conduct than about removing a man who might have quickly uncovered the flimsiness of the Russia allegations.
Next came Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a Trump loyalist but a DOJ outsider with no prior experience in its leadership. Under pressure over his own contacts with the same Russian ambassador, Sessions recused himself from any matters related to the 2016 campaign on March 2. This decision, encouraged by DOJ ethics officials from the Obama era and accepted without challenge by Pence and other advisers, effectively ceded control of any Trump-Russia inquiries to deep state officials and Obama holdovers. It was the opening the FBI needed.
By mid-May, after Trump fired Comey at the recommendation of Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, the FBIโs leadership was in open revolt. McCabe, Priestap, and Baker, all veterans of the Obama years, debated whether Trump had acted at Moscowโs behest. They even discussed the 25th Amendment and the idea of Rosenstein surreptitiously recording the president. These were not jokes. On May 16, McCabe authorized a full counterintelligence and criminal investigation into Trump himself, premised on the possibility that he was an agent of a foreign power. This was the first such investigation of a sitting president in US history.
Screenshot via X [Credit: @amuse]
The evidentiary basis for this move was paper-thin, much of it drawn from the Steele dossier, a work of partisan fiction that its own author was unwilling to verify. Baker, the FBIโs top lawyer, was a personal friend of Michael Sussmann, the Clinton campaign attorney who had helped funnel the dossier to the Bureau. Priestap, who signed off on the investigation, had overseen its use in obtaining FISA warrants to surveil Trump associates. They knew the source was tainted and the allegations were fiction. They proceeded anyway.
The day after the investigation formally opened, Rosenstein appointed Robert Mueller as Special Counsel, locking the inquiry beyond Trumpโs reach. Muellerโs team, stocked with Democratic donors and Obama DOJ and FBI veterans, inherited the case and its political overtones. For nearly two years, the president governed under a cloud of suspicion, his every move interpreted through the lens of an unfounded allegation.
The impact on Trumpโs presidency was profound. Key legislative initiatives stalled. Allies in Congress, warned privately by Pence and others that the investigation was serious, kept their distance. Figures like John McCain, Paul Ryan, and Jeff Flake acted in ways that hampered Trumpโs agenda, from blocking Obamacare repeal to threatening his judicial nominations. Inside the executive branch, FBI Director Christopher Wray, another newcomer with no institutional knowledge of the Bureauโs internal politics, declined to purge the officials who had driven the investigation, allowing them to operate until they were forced out by Inspector General findings.
By the time Mueller submitted his report in March 2019, concluding there was no evidence of collusion, the damage was done. Trumpโs first term had been defined in large part by a manufactured scandal. The narrative of foreign compromise, though disproven, had justified a Special Counsel, sustained hostile media coverage, and ultimately greased the skids for an unfounded impeachment over Ukraine.
The Durham Annex, unearthed years later, stripped away any lingering doubt about intent. It documented that the Russia collusion story was conceived as a political hit, that it was known to be false by the time it was weaponized in 2017, and that senior intelligence and law enforcement officials chose to advance it rather than expose it. In Madisonโs terms, the accumulation of legislative, executive, and judicial powers in the same hands, here, the unelected leadership of the FBI and DOJ, amounted to tyranny.
That Trump survived this onslaught is remarkable. Few presidents, faced with a hostile bureaucracy, disloyal appointees, and a media eager to amplify every leak, could have done so. That the plot failed to remove him does not make it less a coup. It makes it a failed coup, one whose near-success should alarm anyone who values electoral legitimacy.
The lesson is clear. The intelligence and law enforcement apparatus of the United States must never again be allowed to become an instrument of partisan warfare. The use of fabricated opposition research to justify surveillance, investigations, and the effective nullification of an election result is a violation not just of political norms but of the constitutional order. It took years for the facts to emerge. It will take far longer to repair the trust that was lost.
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in todayโs media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
Former CNN commentator Angela Rye revealed that she believed President Donald Trump and the Republicans cheated to win the 2024 election and are planning to do the same in the 2026 midterms.
“I think me and [Tiffany Cross] really might feel a way about telling y’all how many days are left till the midterms because I don’t really know this thingโs going to damn happen,” Rye said on her “Native Land Pod” podcast recently.
She added, “Even if they are going to happen, are they going to cheat like they did, I still feel like they did, in the 2024 election? I don’t have data. I got a gut feeling, but I’m going to tell you about the Black woman and the Holy Ghost. We be spot on.”
Her podcast co-star and former MSNBC host Tiffany Cross stopped short of outright accusing the 2024 election of being stolen, though she felt that the election may “require some investigation” based on arguments she has heard. (RELATED: MSNBC Rising Star Blames Joe Scarborough For Her Departure)
She agreed with Rye, however, that she didnโt see a point in looking forward to the midterm elections.
“Even if they did, okay it’s here now,” Cross said. “Like what, they’re not going to say โokay takesies backsies we stole it.โ Like they have already instituted this authoritarian regime, and I don’t know any post-industrialized country that has come this far into authoritarianism and turned around.”
She continued, “So why we think all of a sudden we’re going to have free and fair elections in this country for midterms, which we’ve never really had, as Black folks know all too well and, as women know all too well. We’ve never really had that, but we think somehow in 480 days that we’re going to have a better chance at democracy. I just don’t think so.”
Rye’s baseless claims come amid a time when the threat of political violence appears to be reaching a fever pitch.
Democrat lawmakers say their voters are enraged at the lack of ability to counter President Donald Trumpโs agenda, with some sounding the alarm that they could potentially resort to โviolence,โ Axios reported last week.
The outlet says it spoke to over two dozen House Democrats to measure the temperature of the Democrat base and what it uncovered was red-hot anger and a desire to circumvent the rule of law.
โWeโve got people who are desperately wanting us to do somethingโฆ no matter what we say, they want [more],โ Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.) told the outlet.
Another said their constituents are convinced that โcivility isnโt workingโ and that they should prepare for โviolenceโฆ to fight to protect our democracy.โ
President Donald J. Trump announced his latest push to support American workers and American-made cars: a sweeping tax reform that will let vehicle owners deduct interest on U.S.-made auto loans โ a move that puts American industry, not foreign conglomerates, back in the driverโs seat.
Standing shoulder-to-shoulder with hardworking men and women from across the country โ from farmers to food delivery drivers โ Trump proudly introduced James Benson, a third-generation Ford autoworker from Belleville, Michigan, as a symbol of the shift sweeping Middle America.
โI used to be a Democrat,โ Benson said, โbut after what President Trump did for our jobs and our families, I changed in 2017. I saw the difference right away โ in my paycheck, in our plant, and in the way Washington finally started listening to us.โ
President Trump, whose bold tax overhaul in 2017 unleashed a wave of economic growth and record employment, doubled down on his Buy American, Hire American pledge. This time, his weapon of choice is a โbig, beautifulโ bill that makes auto loan interest up to $10,000 fully tax-deductible โ but only if the vehicle was assembled in the U.S.A.
โIf your car is made here in America โ not in China, not in Mexico โ then you get the deduction,โ Trump declared. โIf itโs made someplace else, we donโt care.โ
The tax break would apply to passenger vehicles โ including cars, trucks, SUVs, vans, and motorcycles โ built on U.S. soil and delivered fully assembled to dealerships. This ensures that the jobs created and the benefits received stay where they belong: right here in the United States.
Details of the America First Auto Loan Deduction
Deduction Limit: Up to $10,000 in interest on qualified auto loans
Eligibility: Applies only to vehicles assembled in the U.S.
Income Threshold: Phases out for individuals earning above $100,000
Time Frame: Applies to tax years 2025 through 2028
James Bensonโs story mirrors that of millions across the Rust Belt: Americans who voted Democrat for decades but saw real results only after Trump took office.
โFord has a lot of plants here,โ Trump noted. โAnd if you build here, youโre going to make a lot of money. I love the autoworkers.โ
This isnโt just rhetoric. Ford recently announced a $3.5 billion investment in a battery plant in Michigan, citing stable trade conditions and pro-manufacturing policy signals.
President Donald Trump personally called the family of Staff Sgt. Michael Ollis to inform them that their son would be awarded the Medal of Honorโthe nationโs highest military decoration.
The emotional phone call, captured on video, shows Ollisโ father, Robert, answering the call on speakerphone, visibly stunned as the president delivers the news.
โWeโre very nervous,โ Robert Ollis says at the start of the call.
โYou should be, because your son is going to get the highest honor that you can have,โ President Trump replied. โThere is no higher honor than the Congressional Medal of Honor.โ
Robertโs disbelief quickly turned to joy, his mouth hanging open before breaking into a wide smile as the weight of the moment set in.
โHeโs looking down at you right now,โ Trump told the family. โHeโs saying, โWell, my mom and dad are handling this pretty well.โโ
โThank you so much, Mr. President. You have no idea the happiness we have,โ Robert responded.
Ollisโ mother, Linda, expressed gratitude not only for the recognition, but for the years-long effort it took to make it happen.
โThank you for facilitating this! This is so wonderful,โ she said, explaining that the family had advocated for years, reaching out to countless officials and organizations to ensure their sonโs heroism was properly recognized.
President Trump acknowledged that persistence, noting that grassroots advocacyโoften led by families and veteransโis essential to ensuring acts of valor are not forgotten.
โOtherwise, how are we going to know, right?โ Trump said. โPeople donโt know. So I think thatโs fantastic.โ
The decision comes after sustained advocacy from veteransโ groups, elected officials, and the Staten Island community, all of whom argued that Ollisโ actions clearly met the standard for the Medal of Honor.
Staff Sgt. Ollis, a U.S. Army Ranger from Staten Island, was killed in Afghanistan on August 28, 2013. During a suicide bombing, the 24-year-old soldier threw himself over a Polish army officer, sacrificing his life to save that of an allied servicemanโan act emblematic of the selflessness and courage that define Americaโs warriors.
We were notified by the White House that Staten Islandโs hometown hero, U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Michael Ollis, has been approved for the Medal of Honor for his extraordinary act of heroism. In 2013, Staff Sergeant Ollis gave his life to save an allied soldier, and his courage,โฆ pic.twitter.com/FMogM3eWFP
The Medal of Honor is awarded for acts that go far beyond the call of duty, recognizing โconspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life,โ according to the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. While criteria have evolved, the standard has always reflected extraordinary courage. The current guidelines were formalized during the Vietnam War in 1963.
As the call continued, President Trump reflected candidly on the magnitude of Ollisโ sacrifice.
โI read what your son did, and itโsโI wouldnโt do it, Linda,โ Trump said.
โIโm not brave enough either,โ Linda replied softly.
โNeither am I,โ Robert added. โEven though Iโm a Vietnam vet, I still wouldnโt have done it.โ
Trump urged the family to come together and celebrate their sonโs legacy, telling them that Michael Ollis would be proud of them.
Near the end of the call, a woman could be heard excitedly shouting in the background: โYes, weโre going to the White House, we love you, weโre praying for you every day. Yes, letโs do this MAGA.โ
Robert identified the woman as his daughter, gently signaling for her to calm down.
โHey Robert, bring them all down,โ Trump said, inviting the family to the White House before ending the call.
CNN anchor Gayle King was forced to initiate damage control mode after her co-host and NBA legend Charles Barkley made a faux pas.
Mediaite’s Charlie Nash noted that the dust-up began on Saturday’s edition of “King Charles” when King played a clip of Donald Trump boasting about Black people wearing Trump mugshot t-shirts. โWhen you heard that, what did you think?,โ she asked the hall of famer:
Barkley let out a big sigh, before replying, โFirst of all, Iโm just going to say this, if I see a Black person walking around with Trump mugshot Iโm gonna punch him in the face.โ
โCharles. Charles, you really canโt say that โcause, A. you donโt mean that,โ King quickly interjected.
โOh, I mean that sincerely,โ the Round Mound of Rebound fired back.
โAnd then you will be arrested for assault, and then what?โ King asked, reminiscent of a bewildered parent.
“Iโm gonna bail myself out and go celebrate,” Barkley replied.
After the audience laughed, King told them not to encourage her co-host.
Barkley later clarified that if he were present for Trump’s comments, he would have left.
โThat was an insult to all Black people,โ he said. โTo compare Black history, where weโve been discriminated against, to his plightโ Well, first of all, heโs a billionaire, and they are prosecuting him for stuff he did wrong.โ
King noted, โItโs still in the court system, Charles; we have to wait.โ
โWell, some of the stuff is true,โ Barkley concluded. โThey did storm the Capitol. They did say that the election was stolen.โ
Charles Barkley says that if he sees a 'Black person walking around with a Trump mugshot, he is going punch him in the face'
'If I see a black person walking around with a Trump mugshot, Iโm gonna punch him in the face….I will bail myself out and go celebrate' pic.twitter.com/5dXzh5gKjT
Kamala Harris, who has been a key figure in the Biden administrationโs handling of immigration, discussed the ongoing border crisis during a taped interview with MSNBC’s Stephanie Ruhle. In the interview, which aired Wednesday, Harris acknowledged that the immigration system is broken but expressed confidence in her vague plan to fix it. She once again reiterated her support for a โpathway to citizenship.โ
NEW: Kamala Harris, who let in 15M+ illegals, calls for a "pathway to citizenship" and says the immigration system is broken but she will fix it.
Harris blamed Trump for why so many illegals crossed the border under her leadership.
โWhen Iโm elected president, if the American people give me the opportunity, I will bring back the bill and sign it into law,โ Harris told Ruhle. She emphasized the need for a comprehensive plan, not only to strengthen border security but also to provide avenues for immigrants to gain citizenship.
However, Harrisโs remarks continue faced criticism. Mediaite’s Colby Hall pointed out that simply repeating clichรฉ talking points in a sit-down interview with a friendly host is unlikely to change public perception that Harris tends to avoid difficult press engagements like the plague:
Hall noted in aย column published Wednesday morningย that Ruhle announced her interview just days after appearing on Real Time with Bill Maher and openly advocating on behalf of Kamala Harris, or more to the point, against Donald Trump.
In another part of the interview, Harris seemed to struggle when asked about the economic concerns of middle-class Americans, yet again referencing her own middle-class upbringing. She also appeared uncertain when questioned about her plan to raise corporate tax rates, especially if Republicans take control of the Senate โ a detail that would greatly affect her ability to push forward left-wing economic policies.
NEW: Kamala Harris gets stumped during her first solo sit-down interview since becoming the Democratic nominee.
Stephanie Ruhle: "If you can't raise corporate taxes or if GOP takes control of the Senate, where do you get the money to do that?"
Harrisโ performance in the interview left many wondering whether her administrationโs immigration and economic agendas have been fully thought out.
The White House, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
A new ProPublica report argues that President Donald Trump once signed mortgage paperwork similar to the โdual primary residenceโ claims his administration has highlighted in a legal fight against New York Attorney General Letitia Jamesโan accusation Democrats say is being used as political warfare, and Republicans say is a long-overdue crackdown on fraud and special treatment.
According to ProPublicaโs review of mortgage records, Trump obtained two mortgages in Palm Beach, Florida, weeks apart in the early 1990s, with each loan document stating the property would be his principal residence. ProPublica reports the two homes sat next to Trumpโs Mar-a-Lago estate and were later marketed as rentalsโraising questions, at least in ProPublicaโs telling, about whether the โprincipal residenceโ language reflected his intent at the time.
A White House spokesperson disputed the insinuation of wrongdoing, telling ProPublica that the mortgages were from the same lender and that there was โno defraudation.โ
What ProPublica Says the Records Show
ProPublicaโs account centers on two adjacent properties on Woodbridge Road near Mar-a-Lago. The outlet reports that Trump signed one mortgage describing a โBermuda styleโ house as his principal residence, then obtained a second mortgage for a neighboring property roughly seven weeks later, also attesting it would be his principal residence.
ProPublica further claims that Trump โdoes not appear to have ever livedโ in either home and that the properties were treated as investment rentals, citing contemporaneous reporting and an interview with a longtime real estate agent connected to the listings.
Mortgage-law experts quoted by ProPublica reportedly described โdual primaryโ claims as often legal and rarely prosecuted, but noted that the controversy is sharpened by the administrationโs own rhetoric and referrals around similar allegations against Trump critics.
The Bigger Political Fight: How โMortgage Fraudโ Became a Weaponized Buzzword
The reason this story has legs isnโt a 1990s paperwork dispute. Itโs that โdual primary residenceโ has become a political cudgelโone the Trump administrationโs allies say is about restoring integrity, and one opponents say is about punishing enemies.
In 2025, Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director Bill Pulte has been one of the most visible voices pushing referrals when public figures appear to claim more than one primary residence on mortgage documents. In ProPublicaโs earlier reporting on the broader โdual primaryโ push, the outlet described a pattern of public accusations and referrals aimed at prominent Trump antagonists, including Sen. Adam Schiff, New York Attorney General Letitia James, and Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook.
Pulte has argued that claiming two primary residences is โnot appropriateโ and should be referred for criminal investigationโlanguage that has helped set the tone for the administrationโs broader posture.
What the James case was about
James was charged federally in connection with a 2020 home purchase in Norfolk, Virginia. Prosecutors alleged she secured favorable loan terms by signing a โsecond home riderโ and then renting the home outโconduct they argued was inconsistent with the loan terms. James denied wrongdoing and characterized the case as political retaliation.
FactCheck.org, reviewing the indictment and public reporting at the time, noted that legal experts questioned why federal prosecutors would pursue a case they viewed as relatively minor compared with typical federal prioritiesโfueling claims that politics was driving the prosecution.
Why the charges were dismissed
In a major setback for prosecutors, a federal judge dismissed the earlier case on procedural grounds tied to the appointment of the U.S. attorney who presented the case. Prosecutors then returned to a grand jury seeking a new indictmentโbut the grand jury declined to indict, another rare and significant obstacle.
The controversy included scrutiny of Lindsey Halliganโdescribed as a Trump ally and former White House aideโwho presented the case after being installed in the role amid political pressure, with the judge ruling the appointment mechanism improper.
Supporters of the administration argue the broader point remains: elected officials should not receive favorable terms by misrepresenting occupancy intentions. Critics counter that the pattern of targets, the public pressure campaign, and the procedural problems reinforce fears of selective enforcement.
Even ProPublicaโs critics concede a practical reality: mortgages from the mid-1990s are unlikely to be actionable today. The political impact, however, is immediate: if the administration is setting a low bar for referrals based on paperwork language, the same standardโfairly or notโcan be turned back on the president.
Theย New York Cityย Police Department arrested about two dozen protesters at Manhattanโs Trump Tower who were demonstrating against theย White Houseโs position on immigration policy on Monday.
The demonstrators chanted “Bring Them Back,” while they occupied the lobby of the building. They also read the names of the illegal immigrants who were deported to the CECOT maximum security prison in El Salvador.
Video shot by Fox News showed dozens of NYPD officers entering Trump Tower armed with plastic ties hanging from their belts.
Anti-ICE protests began to spread across the country on Monday in response to an eruption of violent protests across Los Angeles, which has now entered its fourth day.
Two dozen protesters went to Trump Tower to protest the illegal kidnappings and deportations of immigrants with due process. We are demanding the Trump regime halt these deportations and bring everyone home who was sent to CECOT. pic.twitter.com/20xnZXyEHi
Liberal protesters screaming in Trump Tower while NYPD quietly lines up the cuffs. Rise and Resist? More like Sit Down and Catch a Charge. ๐ pic.twitter.com/9XZ421LkjY
— Karli Bonneโ ๐บ๐ธ (@KarluskaP) June 9, 2025
In another video, protesters sitting in a circle were warned to leave the building or face arrest. Once the officersย approached the protesters, they were told they were subject to arrest.
Police then used plastic ties to detain two dozen protesters from the lobby of the building. The protesters were restrained and then escorted outside and placed into police vans.
President Donald Trump warned rioters in Los Angeles that his administration is “not playing around” as U.S. Marines prepare to deploy to the city Tuesday.
Trump made the statement during an exchange with reporters, adding that he had called California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday and criticized his handling of the riots.
“A day ago, I called him up to tell him got to do a better job. He’s done a bad job causing a lot of death and a lot of a lot of potential death,” Trump said of Newsom.
By David Shankbone - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3937757
TV personality Rosie OโDonnell is appealing for prayers as her daughter Chelsea faces what she calls a โscary future.โ
OโDonnell posted on Instagram: โMy child Chelsea Belle โ before addiction took over her life โ I loved her then, I love her now as she faces a scary future โ prayers welcomed. #addiction awareness #love #family.โ
According to court documents reviewed by Fox News Digital, Chelsea had her probation revoked on October 22 and was sentenced to serve time in prison.
In a written statement, OโDonnell said, โI have compassion for those struggling with addiction โ Chelsea was born into addiction and it has been a painful journey for her and her four young children. We continue to love and support her through these horrible times. Prayers welcomed.โ
Last year, authorities charged Chelsea with two counts of felony possession of methamphetamine and felony possession of narcotic drugs, along with two counts of possession/illegally obtaining prescription drugs and resisting or obstructing an officer. Her arrest followed a traffic stop in Niagara, Wisconsin, where officers pulled over a vehicle for loud exhaust โ they recovered a clear smoking device on Chelseaโs person that tested positive for methamphetamine, and a prescription pill bottle containing a handful of pills and a crystal-like substance was found in her possession. At the time, Chelsea was out on bond for separate charges including child neglect and drug possession.
OโDonnellโs Instagram post on December 3 responding to Chelseaโs earlier arrest read: โSo yes this is true โ after being bailed out by her birth mother โ Chelsea was arrested again โ and is facing many charges related to her drug addiction โ we all hope she is able to get the help she needs to turn her life around.โ
Bring in the Trump context
Itโs worth noting that Rosie OโDonnell has for years been a vocal critic of Donald Trump, and the public feud between them has become almost legendary. Back in December 2006, while hosting the daytime talk show The View, OโDonnell called Trump out over his handling of the Miss USA controversy and mocked him as no moral authority for young people โ saying, โThis is not a self-made manโฆ left the first wife, had an affair, left the second wife, had an affairโฆโ People.com+2The List+2
Trump responded with scorn, calling OโDonnell โa woman out of controlโ and a โloser,โ threatening legal action though he never followed through. People.com+1 Over the years he repeatedly used her name as a punchline โ during the 2016 Republican primary debate when asked about his language toward women he quipped, โOnly Rosie OโDonnell.โ The New Daily+1
In recent years their feud escalated further: After OโDonnell announced she had moved to Ireland following Trumpโs second inauguration (January 2025), Trump publicly floated the idea of revoking her U.S. citizenship, calling her โa Threat to Humanityโ and saying โshe should remain in the wonderful country of Ireland, if they want her.โ
The White House, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
The Obama Presidential Center is responding publicly after years of criticism over its controversial design and rising costs, with a senior Obama Foundation official now attempting to justify the project to skeptics.
Construction on the center began in 2021, but many Chicago residents have remained openly critical of the 225-foot-tall structure rising on the cityโs South Side. The gray, largely windowless tower will house President Barack Obamaโs presidential library and museum, departing sharply from the traditional design of most presidential libraries.
Obama Foundation Deputy Director Kim Patterson said the buildingโs appearance โ including its lack of windows โ was intentional.
โThere are not a lot of windows on the building, but thatโs intentional, because sunlight is just not a friend to the artwork and the artifacts that are going inside of the building,โ Patterson told CBS News during a tour of the site.
Patterson also defended the buildingโs symbolism, which critics have widely questioned.
โThe shape of the building was actually meant to mimic four hands coming together to show the importance of our collective action,โ she said.
Chicago is where Michelle was raised, where I got my start as an organizer, and where we built a family together. When the Obama Presidential Center opens next June, it will be our way to give back to a city that has given us so much. pic.twitter.com/DpIUDtyMpP
Despite those explanations, the project has faced sustained backlash from local residents, architects, and fiscal watchdogs. Critics argue the design clashes with Chicagoโs architectural heritage and resembles brutalist government structures. Some locals, quoted by the New York Post, have nicknamed the building โThe Obamalisk,โ a jab at its stark, monolithic appearance.
The controversy has gone beyond aesthetics. In 2018, a lawsuit accused the City of Chicago of illegally transferring public parkland to the Obama Foundation, raising concerns about favoritism and misuse of public assets. That legal challenge was not resolved until 2022, fueling broader concerns about transparency and governance.
Protests have also occurred at the construction site, with residents objecting to both the projectโs footprint and its impact on surrounding neighborhoods. Patterson acknowledged that community resistance forced at least one major design change โ the relocation of a parking garage.
โIf the parking garage was here, it could possibly block sunlight coming to their area, their gardens,โ Patterson said.
She noted that the foundation ultimately decided to place the garage underground.
Fiscal concerns remain a major point of contention. When announced in 2017, the Obama Presidential Center was projected to cost $500 million. As of 2025, that figure has ballooned to approximately $850 million โ an increase critics say reflects a pattern of cost overruns associated with Obama-era initiatives. While the foundation insists private donations are covering expenses, skeptics question whether additional public infrastructure and security costs will ultimately fall on taxpayers.
The center is currently scheduled to open in June 2026.
The criticism surrounding the Obama library stands in contrast to proposals discussed by President Donald Trump regarding his own future presidential library. Trump has floated plans to locate his library in Florida, potentially near Mar-a-Lago, emphasizing accessibility, private funding, and minimal disruption to public land. Supporters argue such an approach reflects Trumpโs broader philosophy of limiting government entanglement and avoiding taxpayer burden.
As debates over presidential legacies increasingly play out through massive construction projects, the Obama Presidential Center has become a flashpoint
Anatomy Of A Soft Coup: McCabeโs Unprecedented Criminal Investigation Of A Sitting President
The election of Donald Trump in November 2016 was, for the entrenched political class, a thunderclap. It was not supposed to happen. The experts, the pollsters, the seasoned operatives had assured the country that Hillary Clintonโs victory was inevitable. Yet by the morning of November 9, the White House was preparing to receive a president unlike any in modern history: a political outsider with no government experience, an instinctive distrust of Washington, and a willingness to discard its conventions. For some in the outgoing administration and the permanent bureaucracy, this was not merely a surprise. It was a crisis to be managed, or better yet, undone.
That undoing began in earnest just four months into Trumpโs presidency, when Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe, with the approval of FBI Counterintelligence chief Bill Priestap and General Counsel James Baker, authorized a criminal investigation into the sitting president of the United States. This probe did not arise from fresh evidence of presidential misconduct. It rested on the same thin reeds that had underpinned the Russia collusion narrative since mid-2016: opposition research paid for by the Clinton campaign, laundered through the Steele dossier, and presented as intelligence. It was a case study in how partisan disinformation can metastasize into official action when it finds a willing audience inside the government.
To understand how extraordinary this was, one must appreciate the context. Intelligence reports later declassified in the Durham Annex revealed that, as early as March 2016, the Clinton campaign had hatched a plan to tie Trump to Russian operatives, not as a matter of national security, but as an electoral tactic. These plans were known to senior Obama administration officials, including John Brennan, James Comey, and Andrew McCabe, before the election. Yet when Trump won, the machinery they had assembled did not wind down. It shifted purpose: from preventing his election to destabilizing his presidency.
The first casualty in this internal campaign was Michael Flynn, Trumpโs National Security Adviser and one of the few senior appointees with both loyalty to Trump and an understanding of the intelligence communityโs inner workings. In late January 2017, Acting Attorney General Sally Yates, an Obama holdover, warned the White House that Flynn had misled them about conversations with the Russian ambassador. The FBI had already interviewed Flynn, in a meeting arranged by Comey that bypassed standard White House protocol. Even Peter Strzok, one of the interviewing agents, admitted they did not believe Flynn had lied. Nevertheless, the incident was used to force Flynnโs resignation on February 13, with Vice President Pence publicly citing dishonesty over sanctions discussions. In hindsight, it is clear this was less about Flynnโs conduct than about removing a man who might have quickly uncovered the flimsiness of the Russia allegations.
Next came Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a Trump loyalist but a DOJ outsider with no prior experience in its leadership. Under pressure over his own contacts with the same Russian ambassador, Sessions recused himself from any matters related to the 2016 campaign on March 2. This decision, encouraged by DOJ ethics officials from the Obama era and accepted without challenge by Pence and other advisers, effectively ceded control of any Trump-Russia inquiries to deep state officials and Obama holdovers. It was the opening the FBI needed.
By mid-May, after Trump fired Comey at the recommendation of Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, the FBIโs leadership was in open revolt. McCabe, Priestap, and Baker, all veterans of the Obama years, debated whether Trump had acted at Moscowโs behest. They even discussed the 25th Amendment and the idea of Rosenstein surreptitiously recording the president. These were not jokes. On May 16, McCabe authorized a full counterintelligence and criminal investigation into Trump himself, premised on the possibility that he was an agent of a foreign power. This was the first such investigation of a sitting president in US history.
The evidentiary basis for this move was paper-thin, much of it drawn from the Steele dossier, a work of partisan fiction that its own author was unwilling to verify. Baker, the FBIโs top lawyer, was a personal friend of Michael Sussmann, the Clinton campaign attorney who had helped funnel the dossier to the Bureau. Priestap, who signed off on the investigation, had overseen its use in obtaining FISA warrants to surveil Trump associates. They knew the source was tainted and the allegations were fiction. They proceeded anyway.
The day after the investigation formally opened, Rosenstein appointed Robert Mueller as Special Counsel, locking the inquiry beyond Trumpโs reach. Muellerโs team, stocked with Democratic donors and Obama DOJ and FBI veterans, inherited the case and its political overtones. For nearly two years, the president governed under a cloud of suspicion, his every move interpreted through the lens of an unfounded allegation.
The impact on Trumpโs presidency was profound. Key legislative initiatives stalled. Allies in Congress, warned privately by Pence and others that the investigation was serious, kept their distance. Figures like John McCain, Paul Ryan, and Jeff Flake acted in ways that hampered Trumpโs agenda, from blocking Obamacare repeal to threatening his judicial nominations. Inside the executive branch, FBI Director Christopher Wray, another newcomer with no institutional knowledge of the Bureauโs internal politics, declined to purge the officials who had driven the investigation, allowing them to operate until they were forced out by Inspector General findings.
By the time Mueller submitted his report in March 2019, concluding there was no evidence of collusion, the damage was done. Trumpโs first term had been defined in large part by a manufactured scandal. The narrative of foreign compromise, though disproven, had justified a Special Counsel, sustained hostile media coverage, and ultimately greased the skids for an unfounded impeachment over Ukraine.
The Durham Annex, unearthed years later, stripped away any lingering doubt about intent. It documented that the Russia collusion story was conceived as a political hit, that it was known to be false by the time it was weaponized in 2017, and that senior intelligence and law enforcement officials chose to advance it rather than expose it. In Madisonโs terms, the accumulation of legislative, executive, and judicial powers in the same hands, here, the unelected leadership of the FBI and DOJ, amounted to tyranny.
That Trump survived this onslaught is remarkable. Few presidents, faced with a hostile bureaucracy, disloyal appointees, and a media eager to amplify every leak, could have done so. That the plot failed to remove him does not make it less a coup. It makes it a failed coup, one whose near-success should alarm anyone who values electoral legitimacy.
The lesson is clear. The intelligence and law enforcement apparatus of the United States must never again be allowed to become an instrument of partisan warfare. The use of fabricated opposition research to justify surveillance, investigations, and the effective nullification of an election result is a violation not just of political norms but of the constitutional order. It took years for the facts to emerge. It will take far longer to repair the trust that was lost.
If you enjoy my work, please consider subscribing: https://x.com/amuse.
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in todayโs media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
Sponsored
MAGA in Space! Americaโs latest space success proves weโre still the greatest. Celebrate โ donate $35 or more and get your Make the Moon Great Again shirt!