Trump 47

yes, I'm commenting on my own post...cuz this is disturbing as hell to me...Historically and/or currently, this practice is associated with authoritarians and dictators building a cult of personality...
 

Supreme Court slaps down Trump and his tariffs​


Voting to uphold a key separation of powers — the right of Congress to impose taxes, not the president — the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on Fridayto strike down some of the “emergency” tariffs President Donald Trump foisted on the world.
 


Donald Trump says he’s had enough of Jimmy Kimmel — launches eyebrow-raising fundraiser​

The subject line of his email said, “Get Trump out of your mouth.” The email portrayed Kimmel’s ABC show as an attack on MAGA supporters. The 79-year-old POTUS urged the “MAGA Patriots” to donate as part of the “MAGA Rally Blitz.” The President revealed how he can no longer tolerate the jokes made by the 58-year-old comedian on Jimmy Kimmel Live! Trump wrote, “He thinks he can sit in his Hollywood studio and laugh at the greatest political movement in the history of our country. He thinks his tired jokes can stop us.”


The President alleged that Kimmel would not have a career at all if he didn’t mention Donald Trump on his show. He furthermore compared Kimmel’s “tiny audience of coastal elites” to the “massive crowd” that he would be addressing at the upcoming State of the Union. Donald Trump shared the link to his MAGA Blitz and urged the “MAGA Patriots” to donate to the cause, which is seemingly aimed at taking measures against the broadcast of Jimmy Kimmel’s show.
Link
 

Republican Don Bacon warns Trump: No tariff codification bailout coming from Congress​

EXCLUSIVE – Rep. Don Bacon (R-NE) won't support a push by Republican colleagues to codify President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs into law, signaling a bailout is not coming from Congress after the Supreme Court overturned them on Friday.

“Oh, I don't think they have the votes,” Bacon told the Washington Examiner, minutes after the court ruled 6-3 that Trump overstepped his executive authority.


The decision was met with calls from Trump allies on Capitol Hill to use reconciliation, a budget process that skirts the Senate filibuster, to pass the tariffs. But getting a bill with that language through the House, where Republicans have just a one-seat majority, is all but doomed to fail.

Bacon, a centrist who is retiring at the end of the year, is one of just six House Republicans who voted to repeal Trump’s tariffs on Canada earlier this month, and he believes the well of opposition is much deeper than that vote suggested.

“I can see doing, you know, some targeted tariffs on countries that aren’t treating us right, but that's not what the president was doing,” Bacon said.

He said that he previously urged the White House's legislative affairs team to bring tariffs on Russia and China to Congress, but does not expect Trump to pursue that approach. The current scope of tariffs applies to virtually every U.S. trading partner.


“Why don't you work with us and draft legislation with us, and we'll pass it,” Bacon said of those conversations. “But that would be an admission that they need us on tariffs, so they don't like that.”
 

Republican Don Bacon warns Trump: No tariff codification bailout coming from Congress​

EXCLUSIVE – Rep. Don Bacon (R-NE) won't support a push by Republican colleagues to codify President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs into law, signaling a bailout is not coming from Congress after the Supreme Court overturned them on Friday.

“Oh, I don't think they have the votes,” Bacon told the Washington Examiner, minutes after the court ruled 6-3 that Trump overstepped his executive authority.


The decision was met with calls from Trump allies on Capitol Hill to use reconciliation, a budget process that skirts the Senate filibuster, to pass the tariffs. But getting a bill with that language through the House, where Republicans have just a one-seat majority, is all but doomed to fail.

Bacon, a centrist who is retiring at the end of the year, is one of just six House Republicans who voted to repeal Trump’s tariffs on Canada earlier this month, and he believes the well of opposition is much deeper than that vote suggested.

“I can see doing, you know, some targeted tariffs on countries that aren’t treating us right, but that's not what the president was doing,” Bacon said.

He said that he previously urged the White House's legislative affairs team to bring tariffs on Russia and China to Congress, but does not expect Trump to pursue that approach. The current scope of tariffs applies to virtually every U.S. trading partner.


“Why don't you work with us and draft legislation with us, and we'll pass it,” Bacon said of those conversations. “But that would be an admission that they need us on tariffs, so they don't like that.”

At least he won't until Trump tells him too. Then he will use some worr salad to try and justify how it's really a good idea.
 
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