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The anti-Trump pope? MAGA melts down over new Pope's attacks on president and JD Vance and claim he is 'not an America-first pontiff'

The anti-Trump pope? MAGA melts down over new Pope's attacks on president and JD Vance and claim he is 'not an America-first pontiff'

Daily Mail​09-05-2025
MAGA America was in meltdown over the election of a new pope with a track record of publicly criticising JD Vance and showing sympathy for migrants.
Robert Prevost overcame 66/1 odds to be selected as Pope Leo XIV on Thursday, becoming the first North American pontiff to hold the role.
But conservative news pundits and Trump supporters were incensed by the decision of the cardinals to appoint a pope slated to be among the 'most progressive'.
Steve Bannon, the former White House Chief Strategist, called Prevost the 'worst pick for MAGA Catholics' and deemed him the 'anti-Trump pope'.
Days before, he told Piers Morgan he thought the 'dark horse' candidate was 'one of the ones closest to Francis ideologically'.
Laura Loomer, a far-right conspiracy theorist who has maintained close ties with the president, lamented online: 'The new Pope once retweeted a post about how we need to keep praying for career criminal & drug addict George Floyd.
'The tweet said, "May all hatred, violence and prejudice be eradicated." What prejudice? Is that another way to spell FENTANYL OVERDOSE? MARXIST POPE!'
'He is anti-Trump, anti-MAGA, pro-open Borders, and a total Marxist like Pope Francis,' she went on, later. 'Catholics don't have anything good to look forward to.'
Mike Cernovich, a right-wing commentator and conspiracy theorist, deemed Prevost an 'open borders globalist' who would 'be pushing for abortion soon'.
He shared posts from the new pope about gun control and deportations to El Salvador as apparent evidence of Leo's dialectical opposition to MAGA America.
Prevost did reportedly vote in the Illinois Republican primaries in 2012, 2014 and 2016.
But he has diverged from the new administration on a number of key issues, echoing the late Pope Francis' views on immigration - a topic Francis and Trump clashed over.
From his posts on X, the new pontiff is expected to carry on as a counterbalance to Trump, representing 1.4bn Catholics worldwide, including around 53mn in the U.S.
Podcaster Joey Mannarino told 600,000 followers the new pope was a 'liberal piece of s**t', sharing Prevost's rebuttal of the Vice President's reading of 'ordo amoris' - a Christian concept of 'rightly ordered love' that made waves earlier this year.
Vance had said in an interview with Fox News in January: 'There is a Christian concept that you love your family and then you love your neighbor, and then you love your community, and then you love your fellow citizens, and then, after that, prioritize the rest of the world. A lot of the far left has completely inverted that.'
Critics judged that Vance, a Catholic, had misread Thomas Aquinas' idea of the 'order of love', accusing him of using the concept to support political ideology.
Prevost joined in the backlash, writing on X in early February: 'JD Vance is wrong: Jesus doesn't ask us to rank our love for others.'
While Vance, a Catholic, was careful to congratulate the new pontiff, Trump-aligned commentators were less choice with their words.
Right-wing commentator Megyn Kelly was at first pleased with the election of an American pope.
But she later asked on X whether it was 'too much to hope that some 20-year-old ran the new pope's X account and he never looked at it?'
Prior to his selection, Prevost had been vocal on a number of issues, painting a picture of his personal politics and what might shape his papacy.
In April, he shared a post from a Catholic commentator who took aim at Trump and the president of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, for making light of the deportation of Kilmar Abrego Garcia.
'Is your conscience not disturbed? How can you stay quiet?' the shared post read.
In March 2022, he shared an article from Catholic News, in which the Vatican expressed its willingness to help as a humanitarian crisis emerged with the war in Ukraine.
He had also reposted a tweet in 2018 that read: 'There is nothing remotely Christian, American, or morally defensible about a policy that takes children away from their parents and warehouses them in cages. This is being carried out in our name and the shame is on us all.'
And he shared several messages directly opposing Trump's immigration orders - including a 2018 letter from Peru's Catholic leaders thanking the Trump administration for 'stopping the separation of migrant children from their parents.'
Pope Leo spent the majority of his career in Latin America, even becoming a naturalized citizen of Peru.
Cardinal Prevost emerged only in recent days as a contender for the papacy.
The tennis loving cardinal – who is also known as Father Bob – is seen as the 'least American of the Americans' and a silent reformer who would carry on the work of Pope Francis.
He was a popular choice with the Latin American and North American cardinals, although he has kept his views on topics such as women clergy and same sex unions quiet.
In his first words as Pope Francis' successor, uttered from the loggia of St. Peter's Basilica, Leo said, 'Peace be with you,' and emphasized a message of peace, dialogue and missionary evangelization. He wore the traditional red cape of the papacy — a cape that Francis had eschewed on his election in 2013.
The crowd in St. Peter's Square erupted in cheers when white smoke poured out of the Sistine Chapel on the second day of the conclave. Priests made the sign of the cross and nuns wept as the crowd shouted 'Viva il papa!'
Waving flags from around the world, tens of thousands of people waited to learn who had won and were shocked when an hour later, the senior cardinal deacon appeared on the loggia and said 'Habemus Papam!' and announced the winner was Prevost.
He spoke to the crowd in Italian and Spanish, but not English.
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Trump letter calling Jeffrey Epstein 'the greatest' emerges as more secrets of 50th birthday card revealed
Trump letter calling Jeffrey Epstein 'the greatest' emerges as more secrets of 50th birthday card revealed

Daily Mail​

time33 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump letter calling Jeffrey Epstein 'the greatest' emerges as more secrets of 50th birthday card revealed

Donald Trump described Jeffrey Epstein as 'the greatest' in a newly unearthed message he wrote for the disgraced billionaire on a copy of his 1997 book 'Trump: The Art of the Comeback.' Trump addressed a copy of the book to Epstein in October the year it was printed, according to The New York Times, which published a picture of the now-president's handwritten message. The words of admiration allegedly read: 'To Jeff - You are the greatest!' The short note is signed off by Trump, and dated October 1997. This comes as more secrets emerge of Epstein's now infamous 50th birthday book, in which Trump repeatedly insisted he did not participate. The New York Times reported Trump was listed on the 'contributors list' for the book, which was organized by Epstein's right-hand woman Ghislaine Maxwell. The publication printed a letter from Maxwell which explained how the idea for the birthday present came about, noting: 'The idea behind this book was simply to gather stories and old photographs to jog your memory about places, people and different events. 'Some of the letters will definitely achieve their intended goal. Some, well... you will have to read to see for yourself.' Maxwell told Epstein she knew he 'would enjoy looking through the book.' 'I hope you will derive so much pleasure looking through it as I did putting it together for you. Happy happy birthday. Love Ghislaine.' Trump lashed out after the story was published with a Truth Social post, writing: 'The Radical Left Democrats are doing everything in their power to distract and obfuscate from our GREAT six months of service to America.' He said 'many are saying [it] is the BEST six months in Presidential history. 'They have gone absolutely CRAZY, and are playing another Russia, Russia, Russia Hoax but, this time, under the guise of what we will call the Jeffrey Epstein SCAM. 'As things are revealed and, I hope will take place quickly, you will see that it is yet another Democrat CON JOB.' In the weeks since Attorney General Pam Bondi revealed there was 'no Epstein client list', Trump has been hard at work trying to convince MAGA loyalists that all the information they were promised on Trump's presidential campaign trail was no more than a hoax orchestrated by the Democrats to bring him undone. 'Hopefully, the Grand Jury Files will put an end to this HOAX,' he wrote. 'Everyone should see what is there, but people who are innocent should not be hurt.' But Trump is having trouble convincing some diehard MAGA fans that there is nothing juicy worth sharing, and the topic has become a thorn in his side as he looks to move on and put the Epstein files behind him. One-time MAGA loyalists are particularly cynical after a piece in The Wall Street Journal last week claimed Trump submitted a risqué hand-drawn picture of a naked woman with a cryptic message inside for the birthday book. The birthday letter included what appears to be Trump's famous signature and was obtained by the WSJ. The outline of a naked woman allegedly frames typewritten text which reads: 'Happy Birthday - and may every day be another wonderful secret.' According to the Journal, the naked woman appeared to have been hand-drawn with a marker, with a pair of arcs indicating the woman's breasts and a squiggly signature reading 'Donald' appearing in her pubic region, mimicking hair. The alleged letter reportedly contained an imaginary conversation between Epstein and Trump, written in third person. In the imaginary conversation, 'Donald' writes: 'We have certain things in common, Jeffrey', to which 'Jeffrey' replies: 'Yes we do, come to think of it.' 'Donald' then responds: 'Enigmas never age, have you noticed that', and imaginary 'Jeffrey' says 'as a matter of fact, it was clear to me the last time I saw you.' Trump furiously denied the allegations and launched a mammoth lawsuit the next day, suing the journalists by name, as well as the publication and Rupert Murdoch himself. If the case proceeds, Trump would need to clear a demanding 'actual malice' standard that must be met by public figures to win in U.S. defamation cases. The standard means Trump must prove the paper knew the article was false or acted with reckless disregard for its truth. He is seeking at least $10 billion on each of two defamation counts. Trump categorically denied any involvement in the drawing or writing of the text. 'This is not me,' he said. 'This is a fake thing. It's a fake Wall Street Journal story. 'I never wrote a picture in my life. I don't draw pictures of women. It's not my language. It's not my words.' It is understood the letter forms part of the initial investigation into Epstein and Maxwell that the Justice Department conducted years ago, however it is unclear whether it was examined during the Attorney General's recent search. Trump lashed out after the story was published with a Truth Social post, writing: 'The Radical Left Democrats are doing everything in their power to distract and obfuscate from our GREAT six months of service to America' Senior administration officials claimed that Attorney General Bondi told Trump during a May 2025 meeting that his name was found in the Epstein documents more than previously thought, among hundreds of other high-profile individuals. The files contained 'unverified hearsay' about Trump and the individuals who had social connections to Epstein, the officials claim. Bondi recommended in that same meeting, according to the Wall Street Journal, that the administration not release more files because they contained child pornography and personal information for victims. Trump, the sources claim, deferred to his attorney general on whether to make additional files public. Just because the president is named in the files does not implicate him in any wrongdoing or connect him to Epstein's child sex trafficking crimes. Former president Bill Clinton also contributed to the infamous leather-bound book for Epstein 's 50th birthday, the WSJ claimed on Thursday. 'It's reassuring isn't it, to have lasted as long, across all the years of learning and knowing, adventures and [illegible word], and also to have your childlike curiosity, the drive to make a difference and the solace of friends,' read the message scrawled in Clinton's handwriting. A spokesperson for Clinton declined to comment when approached by the WSJ, but pointed to a previous statement which maintained Clinton had cut Epstein off more than a decade before his 2019 arrest. Clinton has long maintained he did not know of the allegations against Epstein. He was awaiting trial on child sex trafficking charges when he committed suicide in his cell.

Ghislaine Maxwell seen carrying mystery box into prison after secret meeting with Trump's DOJ
Ghislaine Maxwell seen carrying mystery box into prison after secret meeting with Trump's DOJ

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ghislaine Maxwell seen carrying mystery box into prison after secret meeting with Trump's DOJ

Ghislaine Maxwell was spotted returning to prison with a box of materials after she was grilled by Donald Trump 's Department of Justice over her association with former lover Jeffrey Epstein. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche flew down to Florida to meet in person with the convicted child sex trafficking offender as the MAGA base demands answers on her knowledge of Epstein's crimes. Maxwell's attorney David Markus revealed that she answered every question asked of her during the marathon interview that lasted all day. She apparently also brought some personal effects, as she was spotted returning to prison in Tallahassee, Florida with a box of materials as she re-entered prison. Maxwell, wearing a brown shirt and khaki pants, is allowed to take the box with her back inside by security, in footage obtained by WCTV. The footage came out as Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced he would question Maxwell again on Friday. 'Today, I met with Ghislaine Maxwell, and I will continue my interview of her tomorrow. The Department of Justice will share additional information about what we learned at the appropriate time,' Blanche wrote on social media. Maxwell took the 'full day and asked a lot of questions,' Markus said. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche flew down to Florida to meet in person with convicted child sex trafficking offender Maxwell (pictured) as the MAGA base demands answers on her knowledge of Epstein's crimes 'Miss Maxwell answered every single question. She never stopped. She never invoked a privilege. She never declined to answer. She answered all the questions truthfully, honestly and to the best of her ability.' Blanche arrived at the federal courthouse around 9:00 a.m., and Maxwell's attorneys were also seen entering the building in Tallahassee. Maxwell, 63, is currently serving a 20-year sentence at a low-security prison in Tallahassee and is the only person serving time behind bars for Jeffrey Epstein 's child sex crimes. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced on Tuesday that Blanche had requested an interview with Maxwell to ask Epstein's longtime girlfriend: 'What do you know?' Blanche, Bondi's No. 2 at the Justice Department, confirmed Tuesday the sit-down would take place 'in coming days.' It comes as Trump's DOJ remains embroiled in controversy for failing to put out the full Epstein-related files. MAGA supporters are demanding that Trump do more to get to the bottom of the Epstein files after the president campaigned on making information related to the convicted pedophile public. It's unclear what Maxwell can reveal that isn't already public and the closed-door meeting is fueling skepticism over the handling of the Epstein files review. Maxwell is also on the books to testify before Congress on August 11. Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal (Conn.) said the meeting is a way for the administration to 'secure a cover-up.' The Connecticut senator said that Blanche is conducting a 'secret meeting' in order to strike a 'secret deal giving her potentially a pardon for providing information favorable to Trump.' Maxwell has already made clear her intent to get her prison sentence absolved. Her lawyers asked the Supreme Court to take up her case, arguing the socialite should have never been charged because of a plea deal Epstein struck in 2008. 'President Trump has told us to release all credible evidence,' Blanche said in a statement posted to X by Bondi. 'If Ghislane Maxwell has information about anyone who has committed crimes against victims, the FBI and the DOJ will hear what she has to say.' Maxwell's attorney David Oscar Markus told CNN the team is in discussions to have her tell her side of the story. 'I can confirm that we are in discussions with the government and that Ghislaine will always testify truthfully,' Markus said. 'We are grateful to President Trump for his commitment to uncovering the truth in this case.' Just last week, the DOJ opposed Maxwell's request to have the Supreme Court review her case, with her lawyers claiming she should have never been charged because of a 2008 plea deal the courts struck with Epstein. Trump tried desperately to get his base to abandon criticism of Bondi and the FBI after a memo earlier this month concluded the review found no foul play in Epstein's death. MAGA supporters were particularly enraged that no new material was produced in the Epstein files review and that Trump's DOJ found no existence of a so-called 'client list' of high profile co-conspirators. The president even started calling the whole ordeal the 'Epstein hoax' and claimed Democrats were to blame for stoking conspiracies in an effort to divide Republicans. When that didn't work, Trump directed Bondi last week to request the Southern District of New York to unseal grand jury testimony in the Epstein court case. 'I've contacted her counsel,' Blanche said. 'I intend to meet with her soon. No one is above the law—and no lead is off-limits.' Some Trump loyalists still aren't buying the latest attempt to recover from the failure that this month has caused a rift in MAGA world. Leading the opposition to Bondi's investigation has been conservative personality Laura Loomer, who has taken to calling the AG 'Blondi.' She said on Tuesday that the action seems like a way to 'cope' with the growing uprising within the Republican Party. 'Why wasn't this 'interview' with Ghislaine Maxwell done on day 1?' Loomer questioned on X. 'Shouldn't they have already done this?' she continued. 'Maybe there is a mix up in communication. But I just can't help but wonder whether or not this has already happened. And if not, why?' Attorney and political commentator Ron Filipkowski said if Maxwell's statements implicate Trump, nothing will come out – but that if it exonerates the president, her sentence will be reduced. 'The truth is in the files, not from Maxwell,' Filipkowski wrote. Blanche still insists that the July 6 joint memo from the DOJ and FBI regarding the Epstein files review 'remains accurate.' He says that the department's recent review did not uncover any new evidence that could bring charges against others potentially involved in the crimes. Blanche's statement on Tuesday morning acknowledges that no administration or DOJ has ever asked Maxwell to speak with them about the Epstein case. 'That changes now,' he insisted.

Even the MAGA crowd sees it: Trump's ‘coverup' in the face of Epstein scoops is making his problems so much worse
Even the MAGA crowd sees it: Trump's ‘coverup' in the face of Epstein scoops is making his problems so much worse

The Independent

time6 hours ago

  • The Independent

Even the MAGA crowd sees it: Trump's ‘coverup' in the face of Epstein scoops is making his problems so much worse

The firestorm continued on the MAGA right this week as the political focus on the Epstein files just would not dissipate and Donald Trump dug himself deeper into a hole. With his administration scrambling to explain why it isn't releasing files from an investigation that its own members and supporters have said for years should be made public, the president spent the past two weeks reigniting old conflicts with foes ranging from Rosie O'Donnell to Barack Obama. On Wednesday, those efforts escalated to the point where the U.S. director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, declared from behind the White House briefing room podium that former President Obama had attempted a 'coup' on American soil. But Trump and his closest advisers are coming to quickly realize that they and the mainstream media both greatly underestimated the staying power of the Epstein issue. The Trump Department of Justice, led by Attorney General Pam Bondi, declared in a joint statement with the FBI that Jeffrey Epstein, a wealthy, convicted pedophile who died in federal detention in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, did so by suicide. To support the conclusion, the agencies released video footage of an area outside of Epstein's cell spanning the time he was locked in for the evening on the night of his death. In the same statement, the agencies declared that no list of Epstein's co-conspirators was found within the DOJ's investigation files. That announcement was made in early July. Every week since then has been marked with new efforts by the Trump administration to calm its critics on the right, and each has largely been unsuccessful in doing so. Bondi's own contributions have been less than helpful for the president. She declared the Epstein file was 'on her desk' in an interview earlier this year when asked specifically about the list of Epstein's clients, and presented MAGA influencers with 'Phase 1' of the investigation in special binders bearing a federal seal at the White House. Phase 2 never materialized, and combined with a minute of footage missing from the videos released by the DOJ her consistent overpromising led to a rift between the attorney general and two top appointees at the FBI: Deputy Director Dan Bongino and Director Kash Patel. All of it has proven progressively more damaging to the president's efforts to get ahead of the story, which only exists because Trump himself promised his base that he would release all the information the government has on Epstein when he ran for president. Gabbard's campaign against former President Barack Obama and members of his administration has — so far — been the moist successful of those efforts to distract. Gabbard's conclusion that the national intelligence office she now leads altered intel assessments at then-President Obama's direction to gin up fears about Russian interference in the 2016 election in order to benefit Trump shifted the attention of a number of MAGAworld's wayward voices, like Gen. Mike Flynn, Glenn Beck and Alex Jones. Many others remain fixated on Epstein, however, especially after a pair of Wall Street Journal scoops over the past week. The first detailed a birthday message supposedly penned by Trump and bearing his signature, which alluded to a 'secret' the two men shared. Trump fiercely denied the authenticity of the message and signature, and filed a $10 billion lawsuit against the WSJ and its owner Rupert Murdoch alleging libel. A second one, published Wednesday, reported that Bondi had informed Trump that he was mentioned in the Epstein investigation files that her team reviewed during a meeting in May. Trump's team also described that second story as 'fake'. With the exception of Trump's most committed loyalists, the truth understood across the political spectrum is the same: this issue threatens to derail Trump's second presidency. Progressives and centrist Democrats, as well as the president's own lingering rivals in the GOP, recognize that fact with barely-contained glee. Trump's supporters, meanwhile, couch every statement about the issue with effusive praise regarding how great and wonderful his second presidency has been — and how quickly that could end. One prominent supporter told his audience this week that he'd made that exact point to Vice President J.D. Vance in person. In an episode that posted Saturday, MAGA-aligned podcaster and comedian Tim Dillon hinted to viewers that he'd dined with the vice president and told him the administration was 'done' if the entirety of the Epstein files were not released — and Bondi fired. Dillon later confirmed it was Vance he dined with during a conversation with Alex Jones. 'If you don't disclose everything you're done,' Dillon said he told Vance. 'I mean, nobody will support you guys. You are fully and completely part of this coverup if everything doesn't come out. I think it paralyzes their presidency.' During that conversation with Jones days later, Dillon was already poking holes in the explanation Vance gave him in private. 'I had dinner last week with the vice president, he told me ... they do not have videos of any powerful person in a compromising position [with underaged girls],' Dillon told Jones. 'That's the party line that they're going with. If that's the case, why would Pam Bondi call it evidence? Why would she say it's evidence? She's not an idiot. She's the attorney general. Why would she say that she has files on her desk if none of these implicated anybody?' Dillon asked. 'It just feels like they're covering something [up]. For sure.' 'I feel like, they're telling a story. And the story doesn't make sense,' he added. This week, the fallout in Washington was in plain view. Congress departed early for the August recess, with Mike Johnson sending members home early to avoid embarrassing votes and the spectacle of Republicans joining with Democrats on a petition to release the Epstein files. But there's much more coming, and it no longer has an end in sight. Members of the House Oversight committee want Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's former girlfriend who is serving a 20-year sentence for grooming young women and girls for the sex trafficker, to testify. Thomas Massie, the Republican thorn in Trump's side co-leading the discharge petition, predicted to reporters that his effort would only grow in popularity over the next month as members faced their constituents back home. Then there's the 2026 midterms. If Democrats take back the House next year, a very possible prospect, the final two years of Donald Trump's presidency could well be tied up with congressional investigations centered on the Epstein issue. Subpoenas for Cabinet officials and other Trump officials could be on the agenda as a potentially Democrat-controlled House, with the aid of rebel Republicans, launch probe after probe, even potentially a special committee, to hammer at the issue. The survival of Trump's second-term agenda and, more significantly, his ability to hold his political power base intact could be on the line if the president cannot get on the same page as his base on this issue, and quickly. He needs to stop trying to distract and actually give his MAGA base an Epstein-related meal to chew on.

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