logo
Inside anti-Trump Republican's bizarre and potentially career-ending Epstein plot to take down the president

Inside anti-Trump Republican's bizarre and potentially career-ending Epstein plot to take down the president

Daily Mail​21 hours ago
President Donald Trump 's top Republican nemesis in Congress reportedly broke a truce that the two had struck after vicious infighting.
Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., a maverick who frequently clashes with GOP leadership and Trump, asked Speaker Mike Johnson to mediate a political ceasefire between the president and himself, Axios reports.
The Kentucky Republican has been the frequent target of Trump tirades on Truth Social after voting against every major policy priority of the president.
He is also the victim of TV attack ads from MAGA Kentucky, a Trump-aligned Super PAC focused on ousting the congressman.
The 79-year-old president lashed out at Massie for voting against the 'One Big, Beautiful Bill,' earlier this summer and swore to find another Republican to take his place in Congress. Trump has labeled Massie as a 'grandstander,' a 'loser' and other names.
'Congressman Thomas Massie of Kentucky is not MAGA, even though he likes to say he is. Actually, MAGA doesn't want him, doesn't know him, and doesn't respect him,' Trump wrote in late June. 'He is a negative force who almost always votes 'NO,' no matter how good something may be. He's a simple-minded 'grandstander.''
So to avoid the repeated barrages Massie approached GOP leadership on July 3 and asked for them to appeal to Trump on his behalf, multiple sources told the outlet.
The speaker later spoke with the president and both sides agreed to stop the attack ads, a source revealed to Axios.
Massie even seemed to play ball by helping his party that day advance a vote he'd typically not support.
President Donald Trump has for years attacked Rep. Thomas Massie. He has also vowed to put his political weight behind ousting Massie from office, and a pro-Trump Super PAC is already running attack ads against the congressman in his Kentucky district
But after a leaked memo by the DOJ and FBI on July 6 sparked backlash for claiming the disgraced sex offender Jeffrey Epstein did not have a 'client list' as many on the right have speculated, Massie began questioning their narrative.
'Was Jeffrey Epstein an asset of a government intelligence agency?' Massie posted on X on July 8.
In his bold critiques of the Trump administration's handling of the Epstein files after the deal with Johnson, Massie began questioning who Epstein worked for.
Soon after he apparently violated the agreement with Trump and GOP leaders by raising alarm about the files.
By July 14 Trump's attack ads resumed, and a $800,000 TV commercial campaign hit airwaves in Kentucky slamming Massie.
'We all deserve to know what's in the Epstein files, who's implicated, and how deep this corruption goes. Americans were promised justice and transparency,' Massie posted on X a day later on July 15.
He posted a bill that he drafted to force the Trump DOJ and FBI to release a stunning array of Epstein-related documents. His measure would force the Trump administration to post the Epstein files online in 30 days.
'We're introducing a discharge petition to force a vote in the US House of Representatives on releasing the complete files,' the post continued. Soon multiple Republicans signed on to the Epstein petition, and it will likely get a vote when Congress returns from recess in September.
Republicans and Democrats in both chambers of Congress have signaled they would vote for the measure.
In addition to Trump, Massie has lashed out at the speaker. '@SpeakerJohnson, why are you running cover for an underage sex trafficking ring and pretending this is a partisan issue? MAGA voted for this,' the Kentucky lawmaker wrote last week on X.
Despite this, Johnson has defended Massie to the press and has noted how leadership always intends to back incumbents, no matter the threat from the president.
The speaker has also called Massie's discharge petition 'reckless.' If the bill gets 218 signers, it should get a vote on the floor. Senators have expressed interest in releasing the files as well.
'I filed the discharge petition for one reason, and that's to deliver justice and transparency for the American people,' Massie told the Daily Mail in a statement.
'Speaker Johnson wants to sweep the Epstein files under the rug, but in doing so he will create voter disillusionment that will cost us the majority.'
Serving since 2012 and representing the northern part of Kentucky and the neighborhood south of Cincinnati, Ohio, Massie has positioned himself as a deficit hawk keen on cutting federal spending.
Massie regularly wears a lapel pin with the national debt ticking up and has consistently voted against spending measures, even those pushed by Republicans, for years, and did so again in July when he voted against the OBBB.
The Republican rebel has been garnering a lot of publicity with his Epstein claims.
'This was a campaign promise that the president made, and it's a promise that his administration has made, his vice president has made, his son has made. And it's a promise that's not been kept,' Massie told Kentucky Public Radio in mid-July.
'If it's a hoax, I would say [Epstein accomplice Ghislaine] Maxwell needs to be pardoned,' Massie said, using Trump's description.
'And if it's a hoax, the vice president fell for it, Trump's own children fell for it, the deputy director of the FBI fell for it, the FBI director fell for it, and the AG fell for it. I suspect it's not a hoax.'
Elon Musk, the world's richest man and noted Epstein files enthusiast, has vowed to defend Massie in his 2026 midterm election, a position that puts the billionaire at odds with Trump.
Massie told the Daily Mail before the August recess that he has not spoken to Musk about the CEO's support for his re-election.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Anti-Trump MeidasTouch dethrones mighty Joe Rogan as top podcast in US on YouTube
Anti-Trump MeidasTouch dethrones mighty Joe Rogan as top podcast in US on YouTube

The Independent

time5 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Anti-Trump MeidasTouch dethrones mighty Joe Rogan as top podcast in US on YouTube

Joe Rogan has been dethroned as America's number one podcaster on YouTube by a staunchly anti-MAGA, 'pro-democracy' show. After months of sharply criticizing President Donald Trump 's actions, decisions and rhetoric, the left-leaning MeidasTouch Podcast overtook the Joe Rogan Experience for the first time last week, according to YouTube's weekly ranking of top podcast shows. While Rogan's 20.1 million YouTube followers dwarf MeidasTouch's 5.2 million, the podcasting giant's show finished in second place. Progressive YouTuber Brian Tyler Cohen and conservative-leaning Sean Ryan's shows also made the top ten. The MeidasTouch Podcast saw its rankings climb in July as Trump attempted to appease Congress, the media, and voters over his administration's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case, with episodes zeroing in on the president's past ties to and comments about the disgraced financier. According to a May New York Times report, with the rise of video podcasting, YouTube is now the most popular platform for listeners with a one-third market share. 'We're thrilled to see our audience continue to grow,' MeidasTouch Network co-founder Ben Meislas said in a statement Wednesday. 'It's not just about the numbers. It's about building a movement powered by truth, accountability, and the people.' On Spotify, however, Rogan remains king, taking the number one spot, while MeidasTouch secured the 73rd spot on the audio streaming company's U.S. podcast charts. A similar trend appeared on Apple Podcasts' U.S. charts, where the Joe Rogan Experience ranks second, bested only by ABC News' Cold Blooded: Mystery in Alaska, and the MeidasTouch Podcast comes in 17th. According to data analyzed by Newsweek using podcast analytics platform Podscribe, the MeidasTouch Podcast was the most downloaded podcast overall between June 7 and July 7. The data showed MeidasTouch amassed 124 million views in that period, with Rogan scooping the second spot with 39.2 million views. The three brothers who produce the show, Ben, Brett, and Jordy Meiselas, say they have seen ratings soar since Trump returned to the White House in January. The siblings formed the self-styled 'pro-democracy' MeidasTouch Network in March 2020 as a super PAC with the sole purpose of preventing Trump from being reelected in that year's presidential contest. While the PAC changed its name to Democracy Defense Action, the MeidasTouch Network name continues to be used as a news organization. By February this year, the MeidasTouch Podcast was ranked the most downloaded podcast, according to Podscribe data. 'We're proving that pro-democracy voices are not just necessary but in demand,' Brett Meislas told Newsweek at the time. 'The American people are rejecting the idea that MAGA is mainstream.' These latest numbers mark a shift from the dominance of Rogan and other conservative-leaning hosts like Adin Ross, Lex Fridman, and Ben Shapiro, many of whom hosted Trump as he courted the so-called ' bro vote ' ahead of the 2024 election. Many of those figures appear to be breaking away from Trump, including Rogan, who said Trump's lack of transparency over the Epstein case is 'a line in the sand.'

Trump warned he would have to sell Mar-a-Lago, setting off ‘second-tier' rant against ally Hawley over stock bill
Trump warned he would have to sell Mar-a-Lago, setting off ‘second-tier' rant against ally Hawley over stock bill

The Independent

time5 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump warned he would have to sell Mar-a-Lago, setting off ‘second-tier' rant against ally Hawley over stock bill

Sen. Josh Hawley is explaining why President Donald Trump went nuclear and attacked him for his bill that would ban elected officials from trading stocks. On Wednesday, Trump attacked Hawley, a Republican ally from Missouri, calling him a 'second-tier' senator after the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee passed his legislation to ban members of Congress and other federal elected officials as well as their spouses from trading stocks. Hawley spoke to Business Insider' s Bryan Metzger and The New York Sun's Matt Rice and said that other Republican senators told Trump that the president would need to sell his Mar-a-Lago property under the legislation. 'What he said is that he had a number of people call him and say that the bill had been changed at the last minute to force him to sell Mar-a-Lago and his assets, which is, of course, totally false,' Hawley said, adding: 'It exempts them.' The legislation would only require members to sell their stocks when their next term began, which Chairman Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) criticized during deliberation of the bill, since he said it should also apply to Trump. Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) also criticized the legislation and tried to include a stipulation to investigate former House speaker Nancy Pelosi 's stock trading. That meant that the legislation passed through committee with Hawley being the only Republican who supported the legislation. 'When we walked through the text of the bill, he was like 'oh, okay,'' Hawley said. 'And I said 'your assets are all protected. I mean, it doesn't apply. It applies to the next president.' So, yeah. He finished by saying 'you're exonerated Josh, we love you.'' Members of both parties ardently support legislation banning members from trading stocks. Sens. Elisabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) and Steve Daines (R-Mont.) all support some version of it. In the House of Representatives, Reps. Chip Roy (R-Texas), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) support similar legislation. But it has failed to get off the ground for many years. Hawley had sought to entice Republicans to support his bill by calling it the PELOSI Act. It was later renamed the HONEST Act and Pelosi, who still serves in the House of Representatives, later came out in favor of it. 'The HONEST Act, as amended, rightly applies its stock trading ban not only to Members of Congress, but now to the President and Vice President as well,' she said. 'I strongly support this legislation and look forward to voting for it on the Floor of the House. Despite the fact the bill made it out of committee, it will likely not make it to the floor of the Senate any time soon. The Senate will break for recess after this week. And when Congress returns, it will have to pass spending bills to avoid a shutdown. In addition, the Senate is going into overtime to move through Trump's nominations.

Donald Trump thinks he's winning on trade, but America will lose
Donald Trump thinks he's winning on trade, but America will lose

Economist

time6 minutes ago

  • Economist

Donald Trump thinks he's winning on trade, but America will lose

MORE than 100 days after President Donald Trump's 'Liberation Day', the new global trading order is becoming clear. It is a system of imperial preference. Canada has angered the president, partly by planning to recognise Palestine as a state, and so it faces a duty of 35%. Because Mr Trump reckons that exporters unfairly cheat America, on July 31st he said he would impose 'reciprocal' tariffs on many trading partners, ranging from 10% to 41%. Meanwhile, in order to ward off tariff threats the European Union, Japan and South Korea have all struck deals with Mr Trump, where they promise to open their markets and invest hundreds of billions of dollars in America, in return for levies on their exports of 15%.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store