logo
Trump's achievements embolden him to be even more aggressive

Trump's achievements embolden him to be even more aggressive

Fox News5 hours ago

Donald Trump must be feeling pretty powerful.
He's even demanding that Israel cancel the criminal trial of Bibi Netanyahu.
By any objective analysis, whether you like the president or not, he has been on an incredible winning streak for the last two weeks. Everything seems to be breaking his way.
And as he racks up these victories, from the powder keg of the Middle East to the staunchly conservative Supreme Court, he seems to grow bigger and stronger, like some comic book superhero, and then zap his next adversary.
By hitting Iran's nuclear sites with 30,000-pound bombs – even as we debate the impact – Trump took a risk that stunned the world.
With media liberals and Democrats still in full resistance mode, the coverage has been largely negative, but that doesn't matter. Since his days as a New York developer, he has been boosted by critical coverage because that drives the news agenda and gets everyone chattering about his preferred topic.
But telling another country to drop criminal charges against its leader is a whole new level of what his native city calls chutzpah.
Trump posted the following: "It is terrible what they are doing in Israel to Bibi Netanyahu. He is a War Hero, and a Prime Minister who did a fabulous job working with the United States to bring Great Success in getting rid of the dangerous Nuclear threat in Iran."
Netanyahu is in "the process of negotiating a Deal with Hamas, which will include getting the Hostages back," and Trump wonders how the Israelis could force him "to sit in a Courtroom all day long, over NOTHING."
As Axios points out, Netanyahu is charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust:
"He's accused of accepting more than $200,000 in gifts from wealthy businessmen, and of granting regulatory benefits worth hundreds of millions of dollars to a telecom tycoon in exchange for favorable news coverage."
The trial has dragged on for four years, thanks to Netanyahu's delaying tactics, and there was this war thing that intervened.
So now Trump has called for the trial to be cancelled or Netanyahu granted a pardon – and done it quite openly.
Imagine if a foreign head of state urged this country to drop charges against a major political figure. But Trump doesn't play by everyone else's rules.
Another Trumpian tactic is to make a big move immediately after a major uproar, when the public and press barely has time to digest the previous controversy.
So the president cut off trade talks with Canada to protest its taxation of major American tech companies such as Amazon and Google. This involves revenue they earn from online marketplaces, data and social media involving Canadian users.
Before the weekend was out, Canada caved and rescinded the taxes. It's another case of Trump's tough-guy negotiating tactics getting instant results.
The not-so-beautiful budget bill in the Senate is another classic case. Elon Musk – did you really think he'd stay quiet for long? – calls it "utterly insane" and "political suicide for the Republican Party." The CBO says it would add $3.3 trillion to the deficit over a decade. The Senate measure would also make deep cuts in Medicaid, which Trump has vowed to protect.
Here's the point: One of the loudest Republican critics is Sen. Thom Tillis, who has been voting against a bill he says would betray the president's promise to protect those on Medicaid. Trump has trashed him, saying he will recruit a challenger to oust him from the Senate in next year's primary.
The next day, literally, Tillis announced that he would not run for reelection.
So Trump can save his money. He knocked out the North Carolina lawmaker with a couple of postings.
And then there's the Supreme Court.
By ruling that local judges cannot issue nationwide injunctions, the court has immensely increased the power of Trump and the executive branch. The 6-3 decision came in the birthright citizenship case, though not on the merits, and tore down one of the last guardrails against unchecked presidential power.
It applies to Democratic presidents too, though far more of these injunctions – 40 – have been brought against Trump just in the opening months of his second term. Joe Biden faced 14 in the first three years of his term.
These injunctions – which have always seemed unfair to me, on both sides – also extend Trump's winning streak in the high court. He has, after all, appointed three of the six justices that make up the conservative majority.
And that's not all. SCOTUS ruled that parents with religious objections can pull their children out of public school classrooms when books with LGBTQ themes are being taught.
In yet another decision, the court upheld a Tennessee law banning some forms of transition surgery for transgender youths. Trump has ordered transgender members of the military to leave the service.
Sonia Sotomayor read two blistering dissents from the bench, especially in the birthright citizenship case: "Today's decision is not just egregiously wrong, it is also a travesty of law…No right is safe."
Trump has made clear that he will use expanded powers to be even more aggressive than in the past. Throw in his pressure tactics and funding freezes against elite law firms and Ivy League universities and you have an emboldened president even more determined to stick it to his opponents and detractors.
Of course, even Trump has his limits. The effort to derail Netanyahu's corruption trial was destined to fail.
Oh wait.
An Israeli court yesterday canceled this week's hearings on diplomatic and national security grounds, based on classified information provided by the prime minister and the Mossad spy agency.
Coincidence?

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Did Trump's big tax bill pass? Live updates as Senate enters fourth day of voting battle
Did Trump's big tax bill pass? Live updates as Senate enters fourth day of voting battle

USA Today

time9 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Did Trump's big tax bill pass? Live updates as Senate enters fourth day of voting battle

Debates on and off the Senate floor stretched through a third consecutive night as the House GOP gets ready to push for its own floor vote. President Donald Trump's tax, spending and policy bill remains stuck in limbo heading into a fourth day of Senate debate - including a couple of all-nighters - as Republicans scramble to find the votes and meet a self-imposed July 4 deadline to turn the controversial measure into law. Vice President JD Vance arrived at the U.S. Capitol shortly after sunrise on July 1, as senators approached nearly 24 hours of consecutive floor debate on a series of amendments to legislation that includes provisions on Medicaid reform, increased border security funding and limits to taxes on tips and overtime wages. The outcome in Congress is expected to be either a defining legislative win for Trump or a major setback early in his second term. Asked if Senate Republicans would reach a final vote on Tuesday, Vance told reporters, 'We're going to find out.' More: Medicaid cuts, no taxes on tips and overtime: What's in the Trump-backed Senate megabill? There are at least two Republican senators out of 53 who are expected to vote no on the legislation's final passage. With no Democrats expected to offer support, Majority Leader John Thune can only afford one more detractor. In that event of a 50-50 split, Vance will offer the tie-breaking vote. Despite working through the weekend, senators continued to hash out disputes on and off the floor of the Senate throughout the night June 30 and into the morning of July 1. Thune, R-South Dakota, has told reporters in the Capitol Republicans are "close" to nailing down a deal. If and when the Senate passes Trump's mega bill, it must then be reconciled in the House, where an original version passed by the smallest of margins in May. Votes in the House are tentatively planned for July 2, pending the outcome in the Senate. Trump threatens to unleash DOGE on Musk's companies President Trump said he might order the Department of Government Efficiency that Elon Musk previously led to review the government subsidies that go to Musk's companies as their rift resurfaced while the Senate took up Trump's tax and budget bill. Making the threat personal, Trump said the billionaire tech mogul would probably have to return to his native South Africa without the government's financial assistance. Trump's attack in a 12:34 a.m. ET July 1 post on Truth Social came after Musk, the world's richest man, resumed his criticism of Trump's so-called "big, beautiful bill" in a flurry of X posts on Monday. It included a warning from Musk that he would boost primary challenges to defeat Republican lawmakers who vote for the legislation. "Elon may get more subsidy than any human being in history, by far, and without subsidies, Elon would probably have to close up shop and head back home to South Africa. No more Rocket launches, Satellites, or Electric Car Production, and our Country would save a FORTUNE," Trump said. "Perhaps we should have DOGE take a good, hard, look at this? BIG MONEY TO BE SAVED!!!" Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, has pointed to the bill's projections to raise the national debt by $3.3 trillion over the next decade as the reason for his hostility. But Trump has claimed Musk only opposes the bill because the legislation would end a program under former President Joe Biden that offers consumer tax credit for buyers of electric vehicles. Musk's various companies have benefited from billions of dollars in U.S. government contracts over the past two decades, including SpaceX through its relationships with the Department of Defense and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. In all, Musk and his businesses have received at least $38 billion in government contracts, loans, subsidies and tax credits, often at critical moments, a Washington Post analysis found. - Joey Garrison Senate nears a full day of debate, breaks their own record Senators have carried on debate over amendments to the sweeping legislation for almost 24 hours now. Throughout June 30 and into the morning of July 1, lawmakers have considered and voted on 45 amendments – a record number in what is known in Washington as a vote-a-rama. The previous record for this marathon-style series of votes was set in 2008 at 44 amendments. - Savannah Kuchar Has the 'big, beautiful bill' passed yet? Not yet. Despite working through the weekend, Senate Republicans continue wading through disputes and sticking points, including over proposed Medicaid reforms. At least two Republicans, Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Thom Tillis of North Carolina, are expected to vote no. Majority Leader Thune met with Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, earlier this morning, as she continues to be a key swing vote in the process. - Savannah Kuchar

Elon Musk escalates Trump feud, vows to back Rep. Thomas Massie
Elon Musk escalates Trump feud, vows to back Rep. Thomas Massie

New York Post

time10 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Elon Musk escalates Trump feud, vows to back Rep. Thomas Massie

Elon Musk escalated his feud with President Trump, announcing that he would be backing one of the commander in chief's biggest foes in congress, Rep. Thomas Massie — the libertarian-leaning House lawmaker who Trump has vowed to see defeated in the midterm election. Musk signaled he would donate to the Kentucky Republican's 2026 reelection campaign on X when he responded 'Me' to a post asking who would be backing Massie's congressional bid. Trump, meanwhile, had pledged to support whichever candidate runs in the primary against Massie, who the president lambasted as a 'loser' and 'Third Rate Congressman' in an online tirade last week. 3 Elon Musk announced that he would be supporting Rep. Thomas Massie, a foe of President Trump. AFP via Getty Images 3 Rep. Massie is a libertarian-leaning House lawmaker who Trump has vowed to see defeated in the midterm election. CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images Massie, 54, has been vocally opposed to the One Big Beautiful Bill, which is Trump's sweeping domestic policy bill, and has slammed the US strikes on Iran as unconstitutional. The Kentucky Republican additionally teamed up with Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) on a bipartisan war powers resolution to stop the US from getting involved in the Israel-Iran conflict. The war of words between Trump and Musk erupted after the world's richest man renewed his sharp criticisms of the One Big Beautiful Bill, calling it 'utterly insane' and 'political suicide.' The Tesla boss had raged against the massive spending bill — on which Trump's major policy agenda hangs — on social media ahead of the Senate vote. Trump on Monday night responded with fury, threatening to unleash DOGE against Musk, the department's founder and former head, to investigate his companies' government subsidies. 3 Musk criticized the One Big Beautiful Bill, calling it 'utterly insane' and 'political suicide.' AFP via Getty Images He also warned his former ally that he may have 'to close up shop and head back home to South Africa.' 'Elon may get more subsidy than any human being in history, by far, and without subsidies, Elon would probably have to close up shop and head back home to South Africa,' Trump wrote.

Thought Markets Were Volatile Already? Watch Out.
Thought Markets Were Volatile Already? Watch Out.

New York Times

time10 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Thought Markets Were Volatile Already? Watch Out.

Uncertainty ahead It has been a Jekyll-and-Hyde start to 2025. Analysts and investors are bracing for more drama in the second half. S&P 500 futures point to a weak opening on Tuesday, but the benchmark index is on a winning streak, having closed on Monday at another record. But the dollar has had its worst start to the year in more than a half-century as some investors sweat a possible return of the 'sell America' trade instigated by President Trump's trade war. Amid this split screen, Trump has stepped up his attacks on the Fed and its chair, Jay Powell. The threat to the central bank's independence could jolt global investors' nerves. A recap: Coming into the year, Wall Street hoped that Trump's business-friendly agenda of slashing taxes and regulations would propel stocks. But while the S&P 500 is up more than 5 percent this year, tariff uncertainty has rattled business executives, consumers and investors. And the fate of the Republican policy bill that is central to Trump's domestic agenda remains unclear as the legislation awaits a vote in Congress. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store