
Rosie O'Donnell goes medieval on Trump over citizenship threat: ‘King Joffrey with a tangerine spray tan'
The comedian and former talk show host, a longtime critic of the president, was — like Trump — born in New York to one American-born parent and one immigrant parent.
In a blistering response to his threat, she called him 'King Joffrey with a tangerine spray tan,' a reference to a much-hated, sadistic, authoritarian character from Game of Thrones.
Trump earlier wrote on Truth Social: 'Because of the fact that Rosie O'Donnell is not in the best interests of our Great Country, I am giving serious consideration to taking away her Citizenship.'
He continued: 'She is a Threat to Humanity, and should remain in the wonderful Country of Ireland, if they want her. GOD BLESS AMERICA!'
O'Donnell, who relocated to Ireland days before Trump began his second term, didn't take long to respond.
She posted a photo of Trump with the late sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein to Instagram, and wrote: 'Hey Donald –you're rattled again? 18 years later and I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours.'
O'Donnell wrote that while he had called her 'a threat to humanity,' she is 'everything you fear: a loud woman, a queer woman, a mother who tells the truth'.
After contrasting their lives and outlooks, O'Donnell writes: 'You want to revoke my citizenship? Go ahead and try, King Joffrey with a tangerine spray tan.'
She adds: 'I'm not yours to silence. I never was. 🇮🇪 Rosie.'
O'Donnell and Trump have been feuding since 2006, when she criticized his moral character, calling him a 'snake-oil salesman' and 'not a self-made made,' while she was a host of The View on ABC.
They have traded barbs ever since.
There is no presidential power to strip anyone of citizenship, but since returning to the White House, Trump has sought to end birthright citizenship, guaranteed to Americans under the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.
The 14th Amendment states: 'All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.'
In another alarming move, a recently unveiled memo from the Department of Justice outlines the Trump administration's plans to 'maximally pursue' denaturalization of American citizens.
Approximately 25 million people in the U.S. are naturalized citizens, or immigrants who completed the lengthy legal process to gain citizenship.
According to the June 11 memo, the Justice Department's civil division will 'prioritize and maximally pursue denaturalization proceedings in all cases permitted by law and supported by the evidence.'
That evidence would need to be proof that an individual 'illegally procured' citizenship through fraud or other means. It is rare, but it does happen.
Days before Trump's return to the White House, the 63-year-old comedian left the U.S. and moved to Ireland, which she says has helped improve her health and sleep.
Nevertheless, she remains a fierce critic of Trump, and on Sunday, she blamed him for the impact of the deadly flash floods in Central Texas in a lengthy TikTok video.
'And, you know, when the president guts all of the early warning systems and the weather forecasting abilities of the government, these are the results…' O'Donnell said in part.
As many as 129 people are known to have died in the disaster, with contributing factors being an insufficient early warning system and the timing of the storm, which hit as it did in the middle of the night.
In March, O'Donnell questioned how Trump comfortably won every swing state in the 2024 election, claiming that one of his 'best friends owns and runs the internet,' likely referring to former 'first buddy' Elon Musk.
Despite her long-running criticism of the president, there is no evidence that O'Donnell is a 'threat to humanity.'
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Daily Mail
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- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Kanye West breaks his silence amid ex assistant's 'absurd and outlandish' sexual assault accusations
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Yeezy representative Milo Yiannopoulos also addressed the matter, highlighting 'the absurdity of Pisciotta's quadruply revised claims, which now include kidnapping, battery, rape, false imprisonment and even sex trafficking.' 'She picked the one rapper who loathes violence, has never been arrested, and doesn't even own a gun,' Yiannopoulos claimed. In response to the statements above, Pisciotta's attorney, Lisa Bloom, told 'While Kanye West's publicist has come up with a slickly worded (and outrageously false and defamatory) attack on Ms. Pisciotta, Kanye himself has publicly admitted much of what she's claiming.' 'Kanye's publicist is deafeningly silent on Kanye's own admissions, which will destroy him in court. We look forward to seeing him there, where he cannot hide behind a high priced spin team,' Bloom concluded. The response on West's behalf come just days after Pisciotta accused the father-of-four of sexually harassing and assaulting her on multiple occasions. In her amended complaint, filed earlier this week, Pisciotta accused her former boss of forcing 'his penis into her mouth' during a business trip in San Francisco. The oral rape allegedly occurred not long after she began working for Ye in July 2021. She alleged that he attempted to kiss her on the lips, more than once, despite her repeatedly rejecting his advances, which she insists she told him were 'not professional.' After participating in a writing session for his album, Donda, the complaint alleges that West invited Pisciotta to his hotel suite to discuss the record. When she arrived, Pisciotta alleges in the complaint 'Ye abruptly laid down in his bed and insisted that Ms. Pisciotta lay beside him.' She proceeded to 'reluctantly' sit next to him in bed as her then-boss praised her work and shared how he could 'propel' her success in the music industry, according to the complaint. 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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Questions the Secret Service still need to answer a year after the Trump assassination attempt in Butler
It's been a year since the first attempted assassination of Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania. Yet, many questions still remain unanswered about the Secret Service's conduct both on that day, and since. Kentucky Republican Rand Paul who chairs the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee released on Sunday his final report on the Butler investigation. Paul's report is full of a 'disturbing pattern of denials, mismanagement, and missed warning signs' from the Senate investigation into assassination attempt. 'What happened in Butler, Pennsylvania, was not just a tragedy—it was a scandal. The United States Secret Service failed to act on credible intelligence, failed to coordinate with local law enforcement, and failed to prevent an attack that nearly took the life of a then-former president,' said Chairman Paul. 'Despite those failures, no one has been fired,' Paul noted. 'This was not a single lapse in judgment. It was a complete breakdown of security at every level—fueled by bureaucratic indifference, a lack of clear protocols, and a shocking refusal to act on direct threats. We must hold individuals accountable and ensure reforms are fully implemented so this never happens again,' Paul added. The July 13, 2024 attempt on Trump's life came during a rally at the Farm Show Grounds in Butler, where 20-year-old gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks perched atop a building just beyond the perimeter gates. Crooks was able to fire off a series of bullets aimed at Trump's head - one of which grazed his ear - before officers took him down. Since the incident, it has become apparent that four counter-sniper teams were in place on the day, two of them being from the Secret Service, and two from local law enforcement. At the time of the incident, Secret Service blamed local police for failing to secure the rooftop from which Crooks attempted to assassinate then-former President Donald Trump, insisting it was outside the perimeter the federal agency was tasked with protecting. Carson Swick - a former Pennsylvania campaign reporter for the New York Post who now works at the Baltimore Sun - told the Daily Mail that he thought it was odd that the rooftop on which Crooks was perched that day was not occupied by a Secret Service sniper during the rally. 'I know on the day of the shooting they had some people on different roofs, but not obviously, on that one,' Swick noted. Swick also added that by the time of Trump's return rally in Butler just days before the 2024 election which he also covered, there were no rooftops vacant the second time around. However, during the July rally, securing and patrolling the factory grounds of AGR International Inc. — located about 150 yards from the stage where Trump was speaking on July 13 — was the responsibility of local Pennsylvania police, Secret Service representative Anthony Gugliemi said last year, according to the New York Times. The Secret Service was only tasked with covering the grounds where Trump's rally took place, with local police being recruited to assist with those efforts and secure the area outside the rally. The oversight during the first Trump rally in Butler was one that should not have happened, and ultimately 'the buck stops with the Secret Service,' former FBI Supervisory Special Agent John Nantz, also now a Townhall columnist, told the Daily Mail. 'It's not accurate to blame local law enforcement, because they're always going to give deference to the Secret Service or a federal agency that requests it,' Nantz also added. Swick noted to the Daily Mail that at the time, the Secret Service did not seem to have properly covered Trump during his exit from the rally venue, another apparent failure. The iconic 'fight fight fight' ushered by Trump as he exited the stage mere minutes after the bullet from Crooks grazed his ear was another moment that appeared to leave him exposed, Swick recalled. This week, it became known that six secret service agents were briefly suspended for security failures tied to last year's attempted assassination of Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania. Deputy Director of the Secret Service Matt Quinn told CBS News this week that the suspended employees were given penalties ranging from 10 to 42 days of leave. When the suspended employees returned to work, he said, they were given restricted roles with less operational responsibility. 'We are laser focused on fixing the root cause of the problem,' Mr. Quinn said Wednesday, adding that disciplinary act was carried out according to a federally mandated process. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer told the Daily Mail in a statement that he was 'glad' to hear that more Secret Service employees are being held accountable. But he says the agency's 'failure' to protect Trump at the Butler campaign rally revealed the 'need for changes at the agency, starting with leadership at the top.' He noted that former Director Kimberly Cheatle was 'forced to resign' and that there should be more accountability to come. Then - Republican candidate Donald Trump is seen with blood on his face surrounded by secret service agents as he is taken off the stage at a campaign event at Butler Farm Show Inc. in Butler, Pennsylvania, July 13, 2024 Now-former Secret Service director Kimberly Cheatle resigned last July shortly after the assassination attempt. Two days after the incident, Cheatle noted in a media release issued by the Secret Service that 'personnel on the ground moved quickly during the incident, with our counter sniper team neutralizing the shooter and our agents implementing protective measures to ensure the safety of [then] former president Donald Trump.' Per Senator Rand Paul's report released Sunday, it has become apparent that Cheatle's testimony regarding no Secret Service asset requests being denied for the Butler rally was false. A U.S. Secret Service report released just days before the 2024 election confirmed that 'multiple operational and communications gaps preceded the July 13 attempted assassination.' The Secret Service also described some of the gaps as 'deficiency of established command and control, lapses in communication, and a lack of diligence by agency personnel,' while also noting that 'the accountability process [was] underway.' Dan Bongino - who now serves as Deputy Director of the FBI and formerly spent 11 years as a Secret Service agent - said last year that Butler was a 'apocalyptic security failure' and called for a full house-cleaning of the upper leadership ranks in the Secret Services D.C. headquarters. Yet, the attempt on the now President's life last July was not the only near miss that came his way in 2024. Would-be assassin Ryan Routh managed to get close to Trump last September as he partook in a round of golf at his Trump International Golf Club property in West Palm Beach, Florida. Routh was arrested after he was seen holding a rifle through a fence by a Secret Service agent. Yet, Nantz tells the Daily Mail Routh shouldn't have even gotten that close. 'I have heard that ... it wasn't a scheduled movement, okay. Well, I get that, but I'm not really sure I'm satisfied with that explanation,' Nantz noted. 'I think probably at that time, you're still talking about resource allocation problems,' Nantz added. Limited resources were also given as a cause for the lapse in Trump's July 13 Butler rally security as Trump was not the time yet the official GOP Presidential nominee. The July Butler Rally took place days before the Republican National Convention where Trump was formerly nominated for his re-election bid.