Trump, Hegseth lean on GOP to move defense dollars
Hegseth this past week spoke with senior House Republicans in at least two separate conversations to discuss military spending, with the most recent taking place Thursday at the Pentagon.

Rep. Ted Lieu (D-CA) tore into Republicans this week over a measure that would help private jet owners dodge taxes, drawing a pointed contrast with the everyday costs squeezing American households."Gas prices are soaring. Grocery prices are skyrocketing. Utility prices are increasing," Lieu wrote in a post on X. "What are Republicans and Trump focused on? Tax breaks for private jets.""November is coming," he added, in a clear nod to the approaching midterm elections.Lieu was amplifying a post from writer Matt Stoller, who framed the effort as Republicans "trying to exempt private jet owners from paying taxes" and mocked it as a showcase of "right-wing populism."The provision they're reacting to, first reported by Politico, is tucked into an air-safety bill now moving through Congress. According to the outlet, the language would bar tax officials nationwide from using the identifying signals that aircraft are required to broadcast in flight to help enforce what owners owe.Since 2020, Politico reported, the FAA has required planes to carry a satellite-based technology called ADS-B Out, which continuously transmits a plane's location, speed and identification number to make air-traffic tracking more precise. Tax collectors discovered the same data let them match aircraft to their owners — and to the property, sales and use taxes many had been skipping by registering planes in states like Montana or Delaware that don't charge them.Politico reported that Los Angeles County Assessor Jeff Prang said that the data helped his office identify an additional 1,000 aircraft since January, worth a combined $3.5 billion — roughly $35 million in local property taxes that owners had avoided. More than a dozen states use the data for tax enforcement, and Alabama estimated a ban would cost it $18 million a year.Republicans and aviation groups counter that the technology was meant for safety, not revenue. Sen. Ted Budd (R-NC) said some states were "abusing" critical safety tech to impose unfair fees, and the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, which has lobbied for the ban, called the tax use a "misuse of a safety tool." The Trump administration has sided with jet owners, with the FAA administrator telling lawmakers the agency "frowns on" using the data for tax collection.Democrats argue the owners simply owe the money. Rep. Laura Friedman (D-CA) described the targets as "extremely wealthy individuals who are not paying their taxes," and said the data lets her county collect what it's due.The House passed its version in April. The Senate's bill leaves the provision out, and the two chambers are now negotiating a compromise. The underlying legislation traces back to the January 2025 midair collision over the Potomac that killed 67 people and pushed Congress to act on aviation safety.
Hegseth this past week spoke with senior House Republicans in at least two separate conversations to discuss military spending, with the most recent taking place Thursday at the Pentagon.
President Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth are in a full court press to sell GOP lawmakers on a massive funding injection for the Pentagon’s budget. Hegseth this past week spoke with senior House Republicans in at least two separate conversations to discuss military spending, with the most recent taking place Thursday at the Pentagon.…
A new national NBC News poll published Sunday spelled trouble for Republicans as the midterm elections approach, with one GOP pollster who helped conduct the survey reacting to the news with concern.“These are rocky numbers for Republicans,” said Republican pollster Bill McInturff with Public Opinion Strategies, speaking with NBC News, noting that while the numbers boded poorly for the GOP, they were “not catastrophic.”According to the poll, which was responded to by 3,000 adults of all ages, ethnicities and party affiliations, 49% of registered voters preferred Democrats taking control of Congress. A total of 44% said they’d prefer Republicans seizing control, and 7% indicated they were unsure.Perhaps more troubling for Republicans’ electoral prospects, however, was the shift in support from independent voters, who in the poll favored Democrats by a 12-point margin. Black and Hispanic voters, as well as voters under 50 years old – groups that helped catapult President Donald Trump to the White House in 2024 – also leaned Democrat.Even more concerning for Republicans, said Democratic pollster Jeff Horwitt of Hard Research Associates, was the lower threshold Democrats would have to clear this November to seize control of Congress.“Does this need to be 2018? No,” Horwitt told NBC News. “[Democrats] are still in a really good position, despite redistricting, to win seats.”Unlike the 2018 midterm elections where Democrats won 40 House seats, the party would only need to gain three House seats to reclaim control of Congress’ lower chamber.Nevertheless, Republicans are “still broadly sticking with Trump,” NBC News reported, despite the poll showing a weaker level of support when compared with just three months ago.“Republicans are still broadly sticking with Trump, with 82% approving of his job as president and 58% saying they ‘strongly’ approve,” NBC News’ report reads. “But that GOP support has dropped since March, when 88% of Republicans approved of Trump’s job as president and 63% strongly approved.”
President Donald Trump celebrated the New York Knicks winning their first NBA championship since 1973 on Saturday night. “Congratulations to Jim Dolan and the New York Knicks!!! What a year it has been but, even more so, what incredible playoff wins we have all witnessed, especially the last four – Maybe the greatest in the […]
Iran circulated competing versions of a proposed interim agreement with the US, even as President Donald Trump stuck to his Sunday timeline to sign a deal.
President Donald Trump endorsed Rep. Mike Collins (R-GA) on Sunday over former Tennessee football coach Derek Dooley just ahead of Tuesday’s runoff between the two GOP candidates. The late-stage endorsement marked Trump’s choice of one MAGA candidate over the other, with both vying to face incumbent Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) in November’s midterm elections. Ossoff, […]
An MS NOW host sounded the alarm early Sunday over one of the stranger wrinkles of President Donald Trump's UFC takeover of the White House: the administration handing a private company control over which journalists are allowed on the grounds.Pointing to a Washington Post report, Jonathan Capehart noted that the White House press corps will be locked out during Sunday's cage fight on the South Lawn unless the UFC itself grants them credentials."This is highly unusual," the host said. "This has never happened."The Post reported that the White House — which normally handles credentialing for major events on its own grounds — is ceding that control to UFC, the mixed-martial-arts promotion run by Trump friend and ally Dana White. According to an email from White House Correspondents' Association President Weijia Jiang, only the small press pool will be guaranteed access; other reporters without UFC credentials would have to watch from screens at the nearby Ellipse or a hotel, cut off from their workspaces and the briefing room.Journalist Sabrina Siddiqui said that, while this is indeed a break from tradition, it's also "par for the course" for a president who consistently limits media access.She further argued that Trump remains "a master of distraction and political misdirection," staging the event against a grim backdrop: an unpopular war with Iran, rising gas and grocery prices, and a string of legal and political setbacks. She noted Secretary of State Marco Rubio had likened the UFC's significance to the U.S. putting a man on the moon, and said the hypermasculine showcase comes as polls show Trump bleeding support among the young male voters who helped power his 2024 coalition.The White House has disputed the press-access reporting. A spokesperson called the Post's account "fake news," saying the administration had extended its existing press pool, and White has said no one was banned from the event.
A Republican strategist argued on MS NOW this weekend that President Donald Trump's planned UFC fight at the White House is such a flop that he is racing to sign a weak deal with Iran just to knock it out of the headlines.Susan Del Percio, a GOP strategist and MS NOW political analyst, made the case on "PoliticsNation" with Rev. Al Sharpton on Saturday, a day before Trump is set to host the first UFC bout on the White House lawn.Asked whether the fight might win back supporters who have cooled on Trump's "America 250" celebration — the run-up to the country's 250th anniversary, which has been dogged by headline acts dropping out of its concert series — Del Percio said it would not."It's not going to bring them back into the fold if they've already been disheartened with him, for sure," she said. The trouble, she argued, is that the event was never really about the country. "What does MAGA — 'Make America Great Again' — stand for? They wanted a celebration of America, not a celebration of Donald Trump," Del Percio said. "So even some of the folks who voted for him, core, core supporters, people who supported him and consider themselves even MAGA, are turned off by all of this."Then she tied the spectacle to Trump's foreign policy. Del Percio claimed the president agreed to sign what she called a "bad deal" with Iran on Sunday precisely to push the struggling UFC event off the top of the news. The fight, in her telling, is "a failure" Trump is scrambling to bury under a bigger story.The timing tracks with the diplomacy. Trump and Iranian officials have signaled in recent days that a memorandum of understanding to wind down the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz could be signed within days, with Sunday floated as a possible date.Del Percio's co-panelist, Democratic strategist Juanita Tolliver, piled on. She pointed to a recent Reuters poll she said found just 16 percent of Americans believe the White House cage fight should be happening at all — including fewer than a third of Republicans and only 11 percent of independents. Tolliver argued the stunt could drag Republicans down at the polls in November.Both analysts flagged the same underlying detail. The fight falls on Trump's 80th birthday, which they cast as the real occasion behind all the "Freedom 250" banners.