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‘America cannot function': Karoline Leavitt lashes out at judges blocking Trump orders at record rate

‘America cannot function': Karoline Leavitt lashes out at judges blocking Trump orders at record rate

Yahoo5 days ago

The White House ramped up its fury at federal judges Thursday after the latest move by a three-judge panel this week to block Donald Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs infuriated officials up and down the administration.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt came to the briefing room podium already breathless as she vowed that the Trump administration would take Wednesday's ruling 'to the Supreme Court,' delivering a minutes-long, impassioned screed about the unprecedented rate at which Donald Trump's second presidency has been rebuffed by the Judicial Branch.
The press secretary went on to note that in February, Trump's first full month in office, he was blocked from taking executive action more times than his predecessor was 'in three years'.
But her comments bely an obvious counter-argument: that the Trump administration's unprecedented usage and scope of executive actions is itself to blame for its sky-high rate of failure at the district court level.
And it's not as if district court judges are alone on an island in this regard. Despite having appointed three of the nine sitting Supreme Court justices, Trump has already seen defeat after defeat at the nation's highest court less than six months into his second term.
Most recently, the Supreme Court blocked his administration from using the Alien Enemies Act to deport migrants, potentially the clearest example of how the second Trump administration has relied on unconventional to outright brazenly defiant legal tactics to defend the actions of the president and his team in court.
A federal district court also halted Trump's outright ban on student visas for international students seeking to go to Harvard, the nation's oldest institution of higher learning, as the White House wages a one-sided ideological war on the school.
Still, administration officials are waging war on the judiciary, labeling even conservative judges as 'activist' if they rule against Trump.
'There is a troubling and dangerous trend of unelected judges inserting themselves into the presidential decision making process,' Leavitt said from the podium in her opening remarks Thursday.
'America cannot function if President Trump, or any other president, for that matter, has their sensitive diplomatic or trade negotiations railroaded by activist judges.
'These judges are threatening to undermine the credibility of the United States on the world stage,' Leavitt accused, going on to say America's jurists 'brazenly abuse their judicial power to usurp the authority of President Trump.'
She insisted that the court system risked turning America into a non-functioning country if judges continue to refuse to let the president have his way.
News broke hours after Leavitt's briefing of a federal appeals court panel temporarily staying the lower court's ruling against Trump on tariffs. But at a press conference later in the afternoon, tensions were still high.
White House trade adviser Peter Navarro lashed out at a reporter for The Independent, Andrew Feinberg, for asking about the frequency with which the administration attacks judges as 'activists' when the president or his officials disagree with their rulings.
'Who is this guy?' the hair-trigger Navarro railed, evading the question in the process.
Leavitt's comments also conveniently ignore the fact that the Trump administration has been resisting repeated orders by judges, including those from the Supreme Court, to 'facilitate' the return of a man whom the Justice Department's own attorneys have admitted was deported in violation of a judge's order prohibiting him from being sent to his home country.
Top administration officials have challenged the order of the lower court, arguing that judges do not have the power to dictate American foreign policy under the Constitution and arguing that the man, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, is no longer legally the administration's burden.
Stephen Miller, architect of the administration's mass deportation plans, also argued on Thursday that the U.S. was facing a 'judicial coup' and warned that 'it is the end of democracy' if courts to not stop halting individual orders issued by the Trump administration.
By the end of April, Trump had already set a record for the number of executive orders issued by his administration, which at current count sits at 157. No U.S. president has ever issued executive actions at such a rate, the previous record-holder being Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Leavitt's comparison to Biden is also bizarre, given that Trump's second-term predecessor took nearly his entire presidency to reach the same number of orders issued by Trump in just four months.
The reality seems to be very simple: Trump and his team, understanding the volatility and unreliability of the GOP's twin razor-thin majorities in the House and Senate, have sought to largely carry out the president's second-term agenda via executive fiat, with limited success.
'If you look at all the Supreme Court decisions, they are fed up with him,' constitutional law expert Norm Eisen told MSNBC last week.
'This 7-2 majority is not going to allow Donald Trump to run amok arresting judges and members of Congress.'

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Can Trump Tackle US 'Chronic Disease Crisis'? Experts Weigh In
Can Trump Tackle US 'Chronic Disease Crisis'? Experts Weigh In

Newsweek

time11 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Can Trump Tackle US 'Chronic Disease Crisis'? Experts Weigh In

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s vow to "Make America Healthy Again" could fall short when it comes to chronic disease, experts have warned. When the MAHA Commission report on chronic disease came out in May, President Donald Trump made it clear his administration was committed to tackling the epidemic "We will not stop until we defeat the chronic disease epidemic in America, we're going to get it done for the first time ever," said Trump during a MAHA event at the White House on May . In a statement included in the press release accompanying the report, Kennedy Jr. said: "We will end the childhood chronic disease crisis by attacking its root causes head-on—not just managing its symptoms." Nearly 130 million Americans are estimated to have at least one form of chronic disease, which could be heart disease, cancer, diabetes, obesity or hypertension, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Experts told Newsweek that, while the Trump administration's ambition to "defeat" the "epidemic" is clear, whether its policies will help or hinder chronic-disease patients remains to be seen. On one hand, Kennedy Jr.'s recent MAHA report, which detailed what the administration believed to be the leading causes of chronic disease in children, indicated the aim was to reduce the prevalence of chronic conditions through public education and research. On the other hand, the proposed cuts to Medicaid funding and work requirements for eligibility to the benefits, which are set to come as part of the broader GOP budget bill, could leave many with chronic disease without access to vital care. As many as three in four adults enrolled in Medicaid report having one or more chronic conditions, and many are unable to work the hours needed to meet the new eligibility requirements, according to nonprofit health policy research and news organization, KFF. So, while some may be medically exempt, others will lose their health coverage, meaning their conditions could worsen without access to care. Newsweek has contacted the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) via email on Tuesday. Photo-illustration by Newsweek/Getty/Canva Tackling Chronic Disease Since he became health secretary, Kennedy Jr. has promised to increase research in the root causes of illness and ensure the American diet is full of high-quality foods, while limiting access to ultra-processed food and certain chemicals, which he believes are contributors to chronic disease. The report states that consumption of ultra-processed foods "has gone up at an exponential rate as share of the American diet." Earlier in the year, Kennedy, had described products from companies like Kellogg's and McDonald's as "mass poison to children." Prioritizing research on the issue is crucial, Kenneth E. Thorpe, a professor of health policy at Emory University, Georgia, and honorary chair of the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease (PFCD), told Newsweek. "Renewed focus on chronic disease and the impact that the U.S. diet has on it—focusing on artificial or chemical ingredients in food, particularly the impact of ultra processed foods—is important," he said. He added that this was because of the fact diet has "a direct impact on the growing rates of chronic conditions like obesity and obesity-related comorbidities such diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancers and many more." "I applaud the Trump administration's focus on addressing the number one cause of death and disability in the U.S.—chronic, non-communicable disease," said Thorpe, who has been an advocate of chronic disease prevention in the U.S. for over 30 years. "We have more people with more chronic diseases, with just 5 percent of the population accounting for 50 percent of the costs in health care." He added that it is estimated that from 2016 to 2030 the cost of chronic disease will be in excess of $42 trillion. "The time is now to focus on the prevention and better management of chronic disease," Thorpe added. What Should the Trump Administration Do While it's too early to tell if the Trump administration is heading down the right path to lower chronic disease prevalence, Dr. Adrian Hernandez, director of the Duke Clinical Research Institute at the Duke University School of Medicine, told Newsweek that "leading indicators appear to be going the wrong way." He said this was partly because of the changes being proposed to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). A proposal for the HHS, most of which was reported on in April, reduces by almost 40 percent its budget for 2026 and reveals major funding cuts for the NIH, according to CNN. Newsweek has contacted the NIH via email on Tuesday. Hernandez added that changes, such as the proposed cuts in federal funding, to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and other agencies within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) were also going down the wrong path. Rather than cuts to these federal health agencies, Hernandez said tackling chronic disease will require "an investment" in science and health. He said that the same was needed for health care delivery models like Medicaid and Medicare—rather than making cuts to the programs, the administration should "invest in preventative health." The GOP budget bill, which is progressing through the legislative ranks, instructs the committee to reduce the Department of Health and Human Services budget by $880 billion over 10 years, which would include cuts to Medicaid alongside other measures such as implementing work requirements. Ross Brownson, director of the Prevention Research Center at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, told Newsweek that Medicaid cuts would "likely have a detrimental effect on chronic disease risk among the most vulnerable populations," adding Medicaid-enrolled adults have significantly higher rates of chronic disease than individuals privately insured. "The drive to defeat chronic disease stalls if Medicaid patients are placed in the backseat," Thorpe said. "Today, the federal program is far from perfect, but it is a lifeline for those who need it," Thorpe added, saying it was "often the only pathway to care" for many with chronic disease. 'A Long-Term Challenge' Experts insist that chronic disease is a deeply complex issue that requires long-term solutions and attention. Brownson noted that there has been "sparse attention to physical inactivity and tobacco use," as major risk factors for chronic disease. "This is a two-edged sword," Brownson told Newsweek. He said that while "on one hand, labeling this issue a crisis implies a sense of urgency and may mobilize action." Ultimately "the jury is still out on whether they will solve the chronic disease crisis." "We often have a short attention span and with this crisis label, policy makers may think the problem can be solved quickly and then move on to a new issue. We need to think of this as a long-term challenge in need of attention," he added.

The Myth of Trumpian Deterrence
The Myth of Trumpian Deterrence

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Myth of Trumpian Deterrence

EVER SINCE DONALD TRUMP RETURNED to the White House, the darnedest thing has been happening in Ukraine. Every day or so, Trump says Russia wouldn't have attacked Ukraine if he were president. And every time he says it, Russia attacks Ukraine. You might have thought that by now, Trump would stop saying it, since Russia's continuing onslaught makes a mockery of his boasts. But he's no more fazed by this falsification than he is by the evidence that he lost the 2020 election. He just keeps repeating his story. In March, Trump proposed a 30-day ceasefire. Ukraine accepted the proposal, but Russia didn't. Russian forces pushed into eastern Ukraine, and on April 13, Russia fired missiles into Sumy, a Ukrainian city, killing at least 34 civilians and injuring more than 100. When reporters asked Trump about the missile strike, he excused it as 'a mistake' and said the war had started only because Vladimir Putin 'had so little respect for [Joe] Biden.' 'If I were president,' said Trump, 'that war would have never started.' The next day, Trump claimed that in his first term, he had deterred Putin from invading Ukraine. 'I told him, 'Don't do it,'' said Trump. But now that Trump was back in office, Putin seemed strangely undeterred. While Trump was touting his magical ability to rein in Putin, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov repeated that Russia wouldn't accept Trump's ceasefire plan. Meanwhile, along the front, Russian troops continued their assaults on Ukraine. On April 17, Trump bragged again that he had deterred Russia in his first term. 'I spoke to President Putin about it a lot,' said Trump. 'There's no way he would've ever gone in if I were president.' The next day, Russia fired missiles into Kharkiv, killing a civilian and injuring more than 100 others. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky proposed a moratorium on strikes against civilian targets. Putin rejected it. On April 22, in an interview with Time, Trump was pressed about a promise he had made in his 2024 campaign. 'You said you would end the war in Ukraine on Day One,' the interviewer reminded him. Trump dismissed the quote. 'I said that as an exaggeration,' he scoffed. 'Obviously, people know that when I said that, it was said in jest.' But he repeated that the war 'would have never happened if I was president.' Support our independent political journalism by signing up for a free or paid Bulwark subscription. Again, Putin defied him. A day after the Time interview, Russia launched a missile and drone barrage against Kyiv, hitting five neighborhoods and killing a dozen people. Trump, in response, tried to do what he claimed to have done in his first term: talk Putin out of further aggression. 'Vladimir, STOP!' he wrote on Truth Social. 'Lets [sic] get the Peace Deal DONE!' Despite Russia's persistent bombardment, Trump insisted that Putin wanted peace: Reporter: This proposal that you put on the table, it's a 30-day ceasefire proposal. Your national security team presented it to both Ukraine and Russia. Two months ago, Ukraine agreed to that ceasefire proposal immediately. Russia has not. And my question is: Is Russia the obstacle to peace. . . . Trump: I don't think so. I think that they both want peace right now. Again, Trump said the war 'would have never happened if I were president,' since Putin 'understood that I would not be happy' if Russia were to attack Ukraine. The next day, April 25, Trump announced, 'Work on the overall Peace Deal between Russia and Ukraine is going smoothly.' He added, 'They are very close to a deal. . . . Most of the major points are agreed to.' No such deal materialized. Four days later, as Russian forces continued to advance, another Putin mouthpiece—Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy chair of the Russian Security Council—declared that the only acceptable outcome of the war was the destruction of Ukraine's government. Share In an interview on April 29, Trump assured ABC's Terry Moran, 'Because of me, I do believe that he's [Putin] willing to stop the fighting.' Moran was incredulous: 'You think Vladimir Putin wants peace?' Trump stood by his man: 'I think he does, yes. I think he does.' On May 2, Trump told NBC's Kristen Welker that his magic chemistry with Putin was already working. 'If I didn't get involved, they [Russia] would be fighting right now for all of Ukraine,' said Trump. 'If it weren't me, they would keep going.' But Russia did keep going. From one town to another, its troops continued to advance. On May 6, a reporter asked Trump 'what type of progress' his overtures to Putin had achieved. 'A lot,' said Trump. 'I think Russia wanted to take all of Ukraine, and they've stopped.' They hadn't stopped. Again, Trump proposed an unconditional ceasefire. And again, the Kremlin rejected it, insisting on impossible conditions. Trump responded by welcoming Russia's demands and shifting the burden to Ukraine. 'President Putin of Russia doesn't want to have a Cease Fire Agreement with Ukraine, but rather wants to meet on Thursday, in Turkey, to negotiate a possible end to the BLOODBATH,' Trump wrote on Truth Social. 'Ukraine should agree to this, IMMEDIATELY.' Trump refused to punish Russia. On May 12, a reporter asked him whether he would impose 'sanctions on Russia if Putin doesn't agree with the 30-day ceasefire.' Trump reaffirmed his faith in Putin's regime: 'I have a feeling they're going to agree. I do. I have a feeling.' Share The Bulwark They didn't. Zelensky offered to meet with Putin in Istanbul, but Putin spurned the invitation. Again, Trump made excuses for Putin. 'Nothing's going to happen until Putin and I get together,' Trump told reporters. 'And obviously, he wasn't going to go.' On May 16, Fox News host Bret Baier reminded Trump: 'You said, 'Stop bombing.' He [Putin] hasn't stopped bombing. He's not at the table.' But Trump—with the same delusional confidence he routinely expresses about massive fraud in the 2020 election—insisted, 'He is at the table.' Throughout the interview, Trump tried to shift blame to Zelensky. The next day, Russia launched its biggest drone attack of the three-year war. On May 19, Trump had a two-hour phone call with Putin. 'The tone and spirit of the conversation were excellent,' Trump declared on Truth Social. As a result, he promised, 'Russia and Ukraine will immediately start negotiations toward a Ceasefire.' The ceasefire didn't happen. Instead, last week, Russia launched more than 300 drones and missiles into Ukraine, killing more civilians. By this point, it was clear that Trump's boasts about deterring Putin were empty. 'He doesn't seem willing to do anything that you want him to do,' a reporter told Trump. 'Do you still believe that, that he wouldn't have launched the war?' Trump clung to his intertwined myths: 'If I were president—if the election weren't rigged—you wouldn't have had the war.' Join now THE SADDEST THING about Trump's Ukraine delusion is that he really could have deterred Putin from extending or escalating the war. But that would have required action, not braggadocio. At every turn, Trump refused to antagonize the dictator he thought was his friend. Last Wednesday, after another barrage of Russian missiles and drones, a reporter asked Trump, 'What stopped you from imposing new sanctions on Russia?' Trump answered that peace might be at hand. 'If I think I'm close to getting a deal,' he explained, 'I don't want to screw it up by doing that.' Then, on Friday, Fox News reporter Peter Doocy tried to ask Trump about the challenges of dealing with 'a very stubborn Vladimir Putin.' Trump, offended that Putin was being singled out, interrupted the question. 'And Zelensky,' Trump added. 'Very stubborn Zelensky, too.' What Trump doesn't understand is that the world's crises and tragedies—the war in Ukraine, the war in Gaza, the October 2023 massacre in Israel, the plight of Afghans abandoned by the United States—aren't a stage for his ego. He treats these scenes of suffering as opportunities to promote himself, by crowing that if he had been president, they never would have happened. He doesn't understand that being president is a job, and the job is to alleviate crises, not exploit them. Putin recognizes that this is how Trump thinks. He knows that the American president, while yapping that the war never would have happened on his watch, won't lift a finger against the aggressor. And that's why the war goes on. 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Critics Gasp At Donald Trump Official's ‘The Thing That Matters' Declaration
Critics Gasp At Donald Trump Official's ‘The Thing That Matters' Declaration

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Critics Gasp At Donald Trump Official's ‘The Thing That Matters' Declaration

State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce raised eyebrows Tuesday after a reporter's question about U.S.–Iran nuclear talks turned into what critics called a North Korea state media-esque moment of praise for President Donald Trump. A journalist asked Bruce about recent reports suggesting the U.S. was open to allowing Iran limited low-level uranium enrichment as part of ongoing negotiations. 'Is there going to be a new round of talks anytime soon?' the reporter asked. Bruce sidestepped the question and pointed to a social media post by Trump: 'You did see President Trump's tweet, didn't you?' The reporter replied, 'I didn't think that would completely negate the reporting.' Bruce let out a loud laugh. 'I appreciate that. I think that's the biggest guffaw I've had here,' she said, before adding: 'The thing that matters when it comes to American policy and what's happening is what President Trump thinks and says.' 'This is the Trump administration. It is sometimes an unusual communication structure, as we've learned here in this very room,' she added. 'But the fact is President Trump tweeted that there is going to be no uranium enrichment. And 'not just any president, but Donald Trump,' she added. Bruce later emphasized how Trump is running the show on the issue: 'The president leads this. The president guides this. It is his guiding hand. The American people are happy with that. They elected him for his expertise and his focus.' Her remarks sparked backlash online, with critics accusing her of sycophancy and echoing authoritarian rhetoric. Tammy Bruce: "The thing that matters when it comes to American policy and what's happening is what President Trump thinks and says." — Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) June 3, 2025 Because we are a dictatorship now? — Lib Dunk (@libdunkmedia) June 3, 2025 Man, she is really just saying that Donald Trump is our King. — Rexx Raul (@rexxraul) June 3, 2025 Sorry, we are not North Korea. — JennX (@JennX0608) June 3, 2025 The problem with that statement is 'what trump thinks'… — Jennifer Tammaro (@Jennanjack) June 3, 2025 ITS A FUCKING CULT. — BN (@Cbulba1447) June 3, 2025 The cult hierarchy, speaks. 🙄 — jp (@ChefjparkJohn) June 3, 2025 This is a pretty unhinged thing to — Ryca (@_oRyca_) June 3, 2025 You have made that position abundantly clear. — John Ashford (@Johnnyash5) June 3, 2025 Authoritarianism is here — Jay Ramsey (@Jaywramseyky) June 3, 2025 — Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) June 3, 2025 Yikes! Ladies and Gentlemen, I bring you, the cult. — theladyTee (@theladytee) June 3, 2025 Arnold Schwarzenegger Drops Bluntest Of Advice To Environmentalists Dismayed By Trump 'Classic Trump' Farewell Gift To Elon Musk Gets The Seth Meyers Treatment RFK Jr.'s Gotcha Moment On CNN Goes Viral Again Amid 'MAHA' Report Controversy

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