First Epstein files, now Trump finds himself in another rift with GOP — this time on Gaza
Earlier this week, Trump directly contradicted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu refuted claims by multiple international groups saying that Gaza was at the point of starvation, calling it a 'bold-faced lie.'
Trump responded during a joint press conference with U.K. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer when he finally acknowledged that there is 'real starvation' in Gaza.
Even Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the far-right MAGA firebrand from Georgia, jumped in on it and called the war in Gaza a 'genocide,' using language that historically only progressives used to describe the war.
And public opinion has largely shifted against Israel despite the brutal Oct. 7, 2023 terror incursion where Hamas squads murdered 1,200 innocent people and took 251 hostages in addition to carrying out acts of depravity on the populace.
With Joe Biden exiting the stage, Democrats are having their reckoning with the party's historic support for Israel. But many Republicans feigned ignorance.
'I haven't seen what the president said. So, was it today?' Sen. Jim Banks of Indiana, one of the more MAGA House members who got a promotion last year, responded when asked about Trump's comments by The Independent on Tuesday.
The Senate remains one of the last true bastions of Republican orthodoxy on foreign policy, which is to say, support for a strong military and America having a prominent role as the enforcer of the global order. Support for Israel remains a core tenet of this style of support, both because of Christian conservatives' theology about the Holy Land and the critical strategic position of Israel in the Middle East.
Republicans historically viewed Israel's placement in an area of the world rife with conflict as another asset for intelligence and security purposes. Trump represented a break from that, focusing more on 'America First' ideology wherein he adopted more isolationist rhetoric, though he still robustly backs Israel and assisted with its war with Iran.
That might be why Sen. Pete Ricketts (R-NE), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told The Independent to contact his office. Sen. Todd Young, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee and Marine Corps veteran, refused to answer questions.
Despite the fact that Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) faces a MAGA primary challenge from Texas' wayward and scandal-ridden Attorney General Ken Paxton, read from the hymnal of the Bush Republicans.
'I think there's definitely a humanitarian crisis, but i think the blame is not Netanyahu, the blame is Hamas,' Cornyn told The Independent. When asked if that's what Trump meant, Cornyn said 'you'd have to ask him.'
Despite the fact Trump relocated the US Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem in his first term and continues to support Israel militarily, he clearly views the American relationship with Israel in a far more transactional light than his Senate counterparts. During one point of Israel's war with Iran, Trump famously said 'they don't know what the f*** they're doing.'
Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), the chairwoman of the Appropriations Committee, told The Independent there is 'clearly a humanitarian crisis there,' said people should remember that Hamas caused this.
Democrats for their part sought to exploit Trump's remarks on Gaza. Unburdened from having to defend Joe Biden's record on Gaza, numerous Democrats pointed to Trump's record to raise the suffering in Gaza.
'What we can do is continue to call upon President Trump, who now has acknowledged that people are starving to death in Gaza, to call upon Prime Minister Netanyahu to let the UN a delivery system,' Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), told The Independent.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) joined Van Hollen's letter this weekend to cease funding for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation and instead resume sending money to the United Nations for food distribution. But Sanders said Trump deserves no credit.
'Look at any newspaper in America today and you see pictures of starving children, this is not a brilliant observation,' he told The Independent.
Last week on the Senate floor, Sen. Amy Klobuchar delivered a speech excoriating Netanyahu. This came weeks after she met with Netanyahu during his visit to Congress.
But Klobuchar said her remarks were not an about-face.
'The reason I went was to raise the lack of humanitarian aid into Gaza and that they had to have more access points,' she told The Independent. 'I think it's getting worse and worse and I know they've let some aid in but it is not enough. This is a crisis, it's a humanitarian crisis, and people are starving.'
Sen Angus King, an independent from Maine who caucus with the Democrats, went one step further. On Monday evening, he released a statement that he would not support any type of aid whatsoever to Israel as long as children starved. For an even-keeled moderate, it was a stunning remark.
'They've cut off water, off and on, and they've really and they've created a situation now where it's so desperate that people are I are going after the aid in a desperate kind of way, and they're, they're using armed troops in that situation,' he told The Independent. 'They have the power to fix it. If they fix it, I'm with them until they fix it. I'm out.'
But Senate Republicans will likely attack any Democrat who signed Van Hollen's letter, specifically vulnerable Democratic senators, even as some of the Democrats are Jewish supporters of Israel. One in particular: Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA), who faces a tough re-election next year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Newsom threatens ‘fire with fire' if Republicans push ahead with redistricting plans in Texas
California Gov. Gavin Newsom has vowed to 'fight fire with fire' in response to moves in Texas to redraw the electoral map to favor Republicans. Newsom was speaking as Greg Abbott, his Lone Star State counterpart, ordered the arrest of the 51 state Democratic lawmakers who have left Texas to prevent its House of Representatives voting through the redistricting proposals advantageous to the GOP by denying it a quorum. Speaking of the possibility of the Sunshine State engaging in its own retaliatory redistricting push to weaken Republican-leaning districts, Newsom said: 'The proposal that we're advancing with the legislature has a trigger only if they move forward, to dismantling the protocols that are well-established. 'Would the state of California move forward in kind? Fighting? Yes, fire with fire.' He acknowledged, however, that going ahead with such a step would have to be done within the law, commenting: 'That process has to have the concurrence, the support of two-thirds of the legislature. 'The maps, we believe, should be transparent. They should be provided in a transparent way to the public, and as a consequence, those maps are being processed and will be brought to light.' He also said that California citizens should be given a chance to have their say: 'We will offer them the opportunity to make judgments for themselves, again, only if Texas moves forward. 'I'll reinforce that we believe it should be a national model, independent national redistricting, and it would revert back to its original form, but it's done in response to the existential realities that we're now facing. 'Things have changed, facts have changed, so we must change.' Newsom continued: 'They've triggered this response and we're not going to roll over and we're going to fight fire with fire, but we're going to do so not just punching with the weight of the fourth largest economy, the most populous state in our union, the size of 21 state populations combined. 'We also will punch above our weight in terms of the impact of what we're doing, and I think that should be absorbed by those in the Texas delegation. Whatever they are doing will be neutered here in the state of California, and they will pay that price.' Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul have likewise indicated they could be prepared to act in kind if Texas proceeds with its gerrymandering manoeuvre. The desperate measures taken by the Texas Democrats to block the redistricting – which saw them jet out for New York, New Jersey and Illinois on Sunday to stop a vote going ahead – came after the Texas House Select Committee on Congressional Redistricting advanced the GOP's proposals on Saturday. Republicans hold a majority in the Texas House of Representatives, as they do in its Senate, meaning the bid to revise the state's 38 congressional districts would likely pass both chambers and be signed off by Gov. Abbott. Doing so would create five extra right-leaning seats in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington, D.C., potentially expanding the congressional GOP's majority and easing the passage of President Donald Trump's future legislative agenda. Faced with that likelihood, the Democrats left town, preventing the 150-seat House being able to hold the vote, which requires at least two-thirds of representatives to be present before it can grind into action. Texas House Democratic Caucus Chair Gene Wu led the exodus and has the support of the Democratic National Committee but he and his colleagues look set to be fined $500 for every day they are absent from the legislature and now face arrest under Abbott's orders after failing to return to Austin in time for a 3pm deadline set by Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
During political firestorm, a CT mayor announces she's leaving before term ends
Bloomfield's town government, already battered by a year of turbulence, hit another bump late last week when controversial Mayor Danielle Wong announced she's leaving more than two months before her term ends. Wong's departure sets up a key decision for the Democratic-dominated town council, which must choose a temporary replacement to serve through the November election. Wong emailed a notice to town hall Thursday announcing that she's moving out of Bloomfield and resigning on Aug. 24. That leaves about two weeks until what's likely to be a bitter primary contest on Sept. 9 between the party-endorsed candidates and a challenge slate led by several former town officials. Under Bloomfield's charter, the council gets to select an interim mayor to serve from Aug. 25 through Election Day. The selection could be a political boost for an incumbent councilor looking to build leadership credentials and name recognition before the November election. At the same time, though, it would mean coping with the widespread political sniping and bickering that has plagued Bloomfield for the past year. A nasty and divisive split over renaming the new Prosser Library in the town center dragged on for months, and bad will and mistrust is even dogging the ribbon-cutting ceremony set for Aug. 16. 'Neither the library staff nor trustees have been part of any of these celebration planning conversations, beyond informing the mayor and her team that this event on this date is premature, at best, and egregiously misguided at worst. She doesn't listen; we know this' library board member Erin Corbett posted last week on Facebook. As of Monday at least two councilors told The Courant they are supporting Anthony Harrington to run the council through mid-November, when the newly elected council will choose a long-term mayor. 'Our current Deputy Mayor Anthony (Tony) Harrington has my full support to succeed Mayor Wong,' Councilor Todd Cooper said. 'He is well positioned as the deputy to step in, having been an intricate part of the leadership and overall council that has produced initiatives, managed projects and created positive change for all of the neighborhoods and residents of Bloomfield.' Majority Leader Kenneth McClary, who is leaving in November, agreed. 'I will be supporting Deputy Mayor Tony Harrington; he is well-positioned to fulfill the remainder of the term. He has demonstrated steady leadership and would be a strong choice to carry forward the work this council has done over the last two years to continue to stabilize Bloomfield while others tried to continue the disruption and offer no solutions on how we build Bloomfield,' McClary wrote. Harrington declined to discuss whether he's interested in filling Wong's job, but offered praise for her work. 'The mayor has spearheaded many vibrant community projects dealing with our town parks, road restoration, affordable housing, town center economic development, youth mental health et al,' he wrote. Councilor Michael Oliver said only that the council is discussing the matter, and Councilor Cindi Lloyd said she hasn't made a choice yet. 'While the social media contributors are doing their usual speculating, name calling and denigrating of councilors on some of the incendiary pages, I have given no thought to it as of yet,' she wrote. Republican Councilor Joe Merritt suggested Harrington is the likely choice. 'Even though I have the most experience having started on the town council 50 years ago, as a minority Republican it will never happen that I would be chosen to be mayor until the term ends in November,' he wrote. 'If we do choose a permanent mayor for the three months it probably will be our deputy mayor.' Wong announced April 25 on Facebook that she had decided against seeking another term. 'Although I will no longer serve as mayor, I am not saying goodbye to public service,' Wong wrote. 'I look forward to cheering on this town's future — and to staying involved in ways that uplift the community that has given me so much. Bloomfield will always have my heart,' she wrote. 'I will continue to serve out the remainder of my term with the same dedication and focus that I brought to day one,' she said in that announcement. But just a little more than three months later, she notified town leaders Thursday that she'll be leaving about 10 weeks before her term ends. 'I'll be moving out of Bloomfield later this summer as my family and I prepare for a new chapter,' Wong wrote last week. 'In order to ensure a smooth transition as my children begin their new school year, I will be stepping down as mayor and from the council effective August 24, 2025, 11:59pm.' Critics on social media promptly slammed her performance as mayor, while her political allies posted messages of praise. 'For nearly four years, Bloomfield has been led by someone who divided our community instead of bringing it together. Under her leadership, we've seen neighbors turned against each other, important issues left unresolved, and a complete lack of accountability,' wrote Rickford Kirton, a former council member who is organizing a Democratic primary challenge to get back in office. 'While some supported her because of political alliances or personal identity, we must stop excusing bad leadership simply because someone is a woman, a person of color, or checks a box,' he wrote on Facebook. Emiddio Botta, owner of the local Pasticceria Italia, wrote 'She did nothing but make false promises to me and my business, then she just no-showed. No one in the town had anything nice to say about her. She resigned, she abandoned the town because she couldn't finish what she promised.' Republican Councilor Shamar Mahon posted 'Mayor Wong's tenure can be defined as out of touch and non-responsive to the will of the community … one thing is for certain, Wong's time as mayor was certainly polarizing.' But others defended Wong as a successful leader who was hounded by resentful former officials who were voted out when her slate was elected. 'I'm thankful for her efforts to plan for a better town center, bring life back to Rockwell Park, and work collaboratively with the Board of Education,' Democratic Town Chair Renae James wrote on Facebook. 'She's been a great leader.' Resident Tollie Miller posted praise for Wong's work. 'Thank you for bringing order to council meetings and subsequent accomplishments for our town. All the while suffering ridiculous attacks on your character from a small minded group who were voted out by citizens,' Miller wrote. Merritt also offered praise. 'Our current mayor has done a good job running meetings so it's too bad she's leaving,' he wrote. 'Unfortunately, mudslinging by a former councilor trying to return to office has made things unpleasant.' Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Why Delray Vice Mayor Rob Long is getting in House race to succeed late Rep. Joe Casello
DELRAY BEACH — Rob Long, a local elected official and longtime political ally of the late state Rep. Joe Casello, entered the race July 23 to succeed him in the Florida House, setting up what could be an uncontested special election in one of the state's most reliably Democratic districts. Long, who serves as vice mayor in Delray Beach, pointed to his record on the Delray Beach City Commission as a foundation for his bid to represent the district in Tallahassee. He highlighted work on public safety contracts, infrastructure projects and efforts to shield redevelopment funding from legislative threats. "I've fought to protect our firefighters when political attacks threatened them, and I've worked to ensure our police officers have fair contracts that keep them here," Long said. "I've delivered major infrastructure projects, like a modern water treatment facility, and secured millions through environmental litigation." As a member of the Community Redevelopment Agency board, he said he pushed back against state-level efforts to weaken the agency, which he sees as essential to supporting affordable housing and local economic growth. ➤ Access The Palm Beach Post on the go with the app: Our app offers a personalized experience to your liking. Download our app to personalize your news alerts, swipe and scroll through stories faster, and bookmark them to save and read later. "I've also seen the importance of local governance on local issues, and I will fight back against efforts to preempt city policy and undermine home rule," Long said. When is the election to fill the Florida 90th House district seat? The race to represent Florida's 90th House district — which spans parts of Delray Beach and Boynton Beach — is all but certain to remain in Democratic hands. The district is the most solidly Democratic in Palm Beach County, and so far, Long is the only candidate to file for the seat. He enters the race with backing of every Democratic lawmaker in the county, along with endorsements from the Service Employees International Union, the Palm Beach County Human Rights Council and the county's Fraternal Order of Police. Long had already filed paperwork in February to run in 2026, when Casello would have reached his term limit. His official entry into the special election came just a day after Gov. Ron DeSantis scheduled the contests: a primary, if needed, on Sept. 30, and a general election on Dec. 9. Because of the timing, the district will go without representation during early committee meetings for the 2026 legislative session. But it would have a seated representative by the time the full session begins next year. "While starting after the committee weeks is not ideal, I will be in Tallahassee during that period to follow the process, meet with colleagues, and prepare legislation so I'm ready to work on day one," Long said. "I already have established relationships in the Capitol, including the full support of the Palm Beach County Legislative Democratic Delegation, and I'm confident I'll be able to represent District 90 effectively from the start." Long's candidacy also triggers Florida's resign-to-run law, which requires him to step down from his commission seat. His resignation will become effective Dec. 8, the day before the special election. Under the city charter, the commission is responsible for appointing a replacement to serve out the remainder of Long's term. If they cannot reach consensus after two regular meetings, a special election must be held to fill the seat. Rob Long's resume: An engineer, environmentalist and politician An engineer by training, Long said his professional background has shaped his approach to public service, combining technical problem-solving with a focus on practical outcomes. Before joining the commission, he served on the Palm Beach County Soil and Water Conservation District, and has since led efforts on infrastructure, environmental protection and public safety in Delray Beach. "I've spent significant time in Tallahassee, building relationships and learning the legislative process, so I can be effective from day one," he said. "My years on the commission have honed my ability to lead, build consensus and get things done, even on contentious issues." If elected, Long said his top priorities would include public safety, affordability and environmental protection — areas he said have shaped both his local record and his legislative outlook. He pointed to stalled contract negotiations and partisan tensions that have affected morale among first responders, saying he would fight for fair compensation and better resources for police and fire departments. On affordability, he cited rising housing costs and Florida's property insurance crisis as pressing concerns, and said he would support efforts to crack down on industry abuses while expanding access to affordable housing. Environmental issues would also be central to his agenda. In Delray Beach, he helped lead a class-action lawsuit over PFAS contamination — polyfluoroalkyl substances are considered "forever chemicals" — and oversaw planning for a new water treatment facility to replace the city's aging infrastructure. DELRAY NEWS: Magistrate sides with police union on pensions, but supports city on wages DELRAY NEWS: Studios and spas bringing wellness — and more foot traffic to downtown DELRAY NEWS: From fashion to fine art, a wave of new storefronts reshapes downtown "Clean water is a basic right," he said, "and I'll continue to champion policies that protect Florida's natural resources." Long was elected to the commission in 2023 after unseating incumbent Juli Casale. The two now serve alongside each other, following her return to the commission in a different seat earlier this year. As he looks ahead to the state House, Long said he hopes to honor Casello, who died July 18 after suffering a severe heart attack, by continuing his advocacy for first responders — including expanding heart health screenings and reintroducing legislation the two had worked on to reduce firefighters' exposure to toxic chemicals. Jasmine Fernández is a journalist covering Delray Beach and Boca Raton for The Palm Beach Post. You can reach her at jfernandez@ and follow her on X (formerly Twitter) at @jasminefernandz. Help support our work. Subscribe today. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Delray's Rob Long enters race for Florida House District 90 seat Solve the daily Crossword