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GOP Senator Gives Trump A Warning About The 2026 Midterms

GOP Senator Gives Trump A Warning About The 2026 Midterms

Yahoo23-07-2025
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) on Wednesday urged the Trump administration to release the Jeffrey Epstein files, warning that the White House's handling of the issue could affect the GOP's performance in the 2026 midterm elections.
In an interview with Axios' Stef Knight, Tillis said the best thing the administration can do at the moment to address the Epstein controversy is 'just release the damn files.'
'The promise to release the files during the campaign was either overplayed and we got a nothingburger if the files get released, or it's something really disturbing, and that's actually even a more compelling reason to release [them],' Tillis said.
A memo co-authored by the FBI and the Justice Department earlier this month alleging there was no evidence to suggest Epstein was killed or that he held a client list to blackmail people angered Trump's base as it undercut claims made by members of his team, including Attorney General Pam Bondi. Bondi told Fox News in February Epstein's client list was 'sitting on [her] desk right now to review' under the direction of Trump.
The Republican senator warned his party's leaders that trying to sweep the issue under the rug by resorting to tactics like House Speaker Mike Johnson's (La.) call to adjourn the lower chamber earlier than planned to block a vote on a bipartisan effort forcing the release of the files will have the opposite effect.
'If anybody thinks that this is going to go away because the House left a day early or something, it's going to be like those zombies in 'The Walking Dead.' Every time you think you've killed it, another one's just going to come running out of the closet after you,' he said.
'This is going to be an issue all the way through next year's election,' he added.
.@SenThomTillis on Epstein: "Release the damn files." #AxiosLivepic.twitter.com/aL7zvj641t
— Axios (@axios) July 23, 2025
Democrats have already been using the issue to hammer Republicans.
Trump has tried to downplay his relationship with Epstein, dodging questions about the disgraced financier, while reports continue to surface about the ties between the two men.
CNN on Tuesday released photos showing Epstein attending Trump's wedding to Marla Maples in 1993 as well as footage from a Victoria's Secret event in 1999 where the two men appeared together. This follows an earlier report by The Wall Street Journal detailing a sexually lewd letter Trump allegedly wrote to Epstein as part of a surprise for his 50th birthday in 2003. The president has denied he wrote the letter and has sued the Journal over that article.
Last month, Tillis announced he won't be seeking reelection next year after he faced Trump's wrath for voting down the president's so-called 'big, beautiful bill.'
Still, Tillis has repeatedly said he doesn't necessarily intend to oppose the president during the remainder of his term ― though he's eager to call out what he's described as 'bad advice' from those who have his ear.
Related...
GOP Sen. Thom Tillis Announces He Won't Seek Reelection
MAGA Is Probably Going To Be Pretty Disappointed By Trump's Latest Promise
Oath Keepers Founder Pardoned By Trump Warns Of 'Trouble' Over Lack Of Epstein Files
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South Dakotans in Congress betray their state with votes that could kill SD Public Broadcasting
South Dakotans in Congress betray their state with votes that could kill SD Public Broadcasting

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South Dakotans in Congress betray their state with votes that could kill SD Public Broadcasting

I never thought I would see the day when U.S. Senators John Thune and Mike Rounds and Rep. Dusty Johnson would sell out their South Dakota values and upbringing to become puppets of a president. Nor did I think I would see them damage institutions that are at the core of South Dakota's society. Unfortunately, it appears that President Donald Trump is so powerful that personal values no longer matter. Last week, all three voted to rescind $1.1 billion in funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting — funding that all three had previously voted to approve. It's clear that National Public Radio was Trump's target. He believes taxpayer money shouldn't be going to support news he perceives as a challenge to his line of thinking. But often when we act hastily and with little thought, the grenades we throw miss the intended target and damage innocent victims. Such is the case here. Only 1% of NPR's operating budget and 15% of the Public Broadcasting System budget comes from the corporation, and both will survive. Most of the corporation's funding goes to support local public broadcasting systems, which likely will not. 'After the cut, NPR is still going to be NPR and PBS is still going to be PBS,' said Julie Overgaard, executive director of South Dakota Public Broadcasting. 'They are all going to continue to exist.' So will public stations in the major metropolitan areas. 'It's the places like us that will suffer the most,' Overgaard said. 'The reason the CPB was set up was so that rural communities can share in a collective public media. 'We don't have enough people and wealth to exist on our own. The very thing they were trying to eliminate will survive. Instead, it's something very important to our state that will be eliminated.' Programs like 'South Dakota Focus,' 'In the Moment,' 'Dakota Life' and 'Jazz Nightly,' along with statehouse coverage and broadcasts of high school sports and activities, may all disappear. What a legacy for Thune, Rounds and Johnson — the men who destroyed SDPB. Last week while casting their votes, they hid behind the need to cut the budget deficit. Funny. They found deficit religion only a few weeks after they voted for Trump's Big Beautiful Bill Act that increases the deficit. The more talented politicians become, the better they are at creating alternative realities. Here's the reality of SDPB's future. The impending loss of $2 million in funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting may force SDPB to quickly cut up to 20 people from its 60-member staff. The damage likely will be worse. Even if SDPB could raise $2 million in three months, it probably wouldn't matter. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting is essentially dead as of Sept. 30, severing the technical backbone of SDPB's network. It facilitates the sharing of programming from network to network. It facilitates emergency alerts and emergency alerts. It handles SDPB's website and negotiates music broadcast rights nationally. 'The situation is grave, fluid and chaotic,' Overgaard said. Rounds acted like he was the champion leading up to the vote, holding out to the last minute as he secured an agreement to find $9.4 million in funding elsewhere for communication towers on Native American reservations. That's not likely to be sustainable in the long-term. 'It's a nice gesture, but it is hollow in its result,' Overgaard said of Rounds' action. 'It will still result in the demise of tribal stations.' Programs like Native American News and other nationally shared music and talk programs likely won't be produced, and the national network that distributes it won't exist. Money and technical support for local programming also disappear. SDPB had just survived a funding fight in the South Dakota Legislature after then-Gov. Kristi Noem suggested cutting $3.6 million in state funding, also largely aimed at silencing NPR. Legislators were inundated with calls, and the result was an overwhelming restoration of funding. 'We know we are very important in people's daily lives,' Overgaard said. 'They trust us in moments of crisis and joy. This has nothing to do with whether we are a valued service. This is politics. I don't know that we ever had a chance to win this.' The only chance is for federal funding to be restored in the upcoming federal budget, perhaps absent taxpayer support for NPR and PBS. SDPB supporters will have opportunities to speak with their congressional delegates during the upcoming August recess. Looking at constituents in the eye can be uncomfortable. Trump puppets are not what we thought we elected. Thune, Rounds and Johnson, what have you become? EDITOR'S NOTE: Brad Johnson is married to a retired former employee of the nonprofit Friends of South Dakota Public Broadcasting. This article originally appeared on Sioux Falls Argus Leader: South Dakotans in Congress betray their state with votes that could kill SD Public Broadcasting

Trump Is Hiring ICE Agents to Arrest Immigrants Coast to Coast, Border to Border
Trump Is Hiring ICE Agents to Arrest Immigrants Coast to Coast, Border to Border

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Trump Is Hiring ICE Agents to Arrest Immigrants Coast to Coast, Border to Border

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Latest Trump tariffs unlikely to budge, top negotiator says
Latest Trump tariffs unlikely to budge, top negotiator says

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Latest Trump tariffs unlikely to budge, top negotiator says

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