
Live Updates: Tehran Casts Doubt on Talks as Israel and Iran Pummel Each Other
News Analysis
The war in Iran is exactly the kind of Middle East entanglement that President Trump's anti-interventionist base believed he was bitterly opposed to, because he said he was.
When President Trump was pressed this week about his administration's conflicting messages on mass deportations, he did not offer much clarity.
'Everybody's right,' he said.
Since his first campaign for president 10 years ago, Mr. Trump has excelled at appearing to favor both sides of the same issue, allowing supporters to hear what they want to hear, whether he's talking about tariffs, TikTok, abortion, tax cuts or more.
But the prospect that the United States might join Israel in bombing Iran is testing his ability to embrace dueling positions with little to no political cost. Some of Mr. Trump's most ardent supporters — those who defended him during multiple investigations and ultimately returned him to the White House — are ripping each other to shreds over the idea, and at times lashing out at Mr. Trump himself, as well.
The war in Iran is exactly the kind of Middle East entanglement that Mr. Trump's anti-interventionist base believed he was bitterly opposed to, because he repeatedly said he was. But he is also the same president who, in his first term, authorized missile strikes in Syria after its leadership used chemical weapons on citizens, and the assassination of a top Iranian general, Qassim Suleimani — two actions he took pride in.
To Mr. Trump, the contradictions are not actually contradictions.
'I think I'm the one that decides that,' he told The Atlantic recently in response to criticism from one of his most vocal anti-interventionist supporters, Tucker Carlson, who said the president's support for Israel's fight in Iran ran against his 'America First' message.
Mr. Trump was propelled to victory in the Republican primary in 2016 as an outsider, in part because he forcefully condemned the invasion of Iraq, authorized by the last Republican president more than a decade before, and the seemingly endless war that followed. Yet he said the United States should have taken the country's oil, and ran radio ads saying he would 'bomb the hell' out of the Islamic State.
He has said he wants to renew the tax cuts he put into effect in his first term, which saved some of the wealthiest earners millions, while also suggesting that congressional Republicans should implement a new tax on the wealthiest.
Image
Iranians protesting in Tehran on Friday. The war in between Israel and Iran is exactly the kind of Middle East entanglement that Mr. Trump's anti-interventionist base believed he was bitterly opposed to, because he repeatedly said he was.
Credit...
Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times
He has said he supports businesses and also wants to deport the immigrant work force that fuels parts of the economy. He wants to engage in mass deportation and also wants to sell visas for $5 million. He has celebrated the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade as a point of pride, while also condemning Republican governors who signed bills banning most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy.
He has both celebrated and criticized his own criminal justice reform bill of 2018.
Despite the contradictions, Republicans for years have been united in support of Mr. Trump and what he says he wants, giving him a benefit of the doubt that few if any career politicians have ever received. Even when most elected Republicans held Mr. Trump at a distance after the deadly attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob on Jan. 6, 2021, Mr. Trump still had a tight grip on Republican primary voters.
Mr. Trump, a celebrity known to the electorate for decades, has obscured longstanding and unresolved foreign policy divisions within the party dating back to the aftermath of President George W. Bush's push to invade Iraq.
But as Mr. Trump decides whether to plunge the United States into the heart of the Israel-Iran conflict, his core supporters are splintering.
Mr. Trump's announcement on Thursday that he could take up to two weeks to decide did not sit well with some of his most hawkish supporters. On social media, the Fox News host Mark Levin began a lengthy post by suggesting that the president was being pulled back from what he actually wants to do. 'LET TRUMP BE TRUMP!' Mr. Levin wrote. 'We got our answer. Iran says no unconditional surrender. Again. And again. And again. They cheat and lie and kill. They're TERRORISTS!'
His anti-interventionist supporters, meanwhile, have been equally alarmed by what he might decide to do. 'Anyone slobbering for the U.S. to become fully involved in the Israel/Iran war is not America First/MAGA,' Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia posted on social media over the weekend.
Mr. Trump's advisers say that, on the Israel-Iran conflict in particular, the president is dealing with a fast-moving, complicated situation that does not lend itself to simple, black-and-white solutions, despite the fact that he has consistently campaigned that way.
'President Trump considers the nuances of every issue, but ultimately takes decisive action to directly benefit American families,' said Anna Kelly, a White House spokeswoman. 'The American people trust this president to make the right decisions,' she said, adding that he 'started the Make America Great Again movement because he represents a new leadership that puts Americans first.'
Mr. Trump's inconsistencies were clear in 2011, the year he gave his debut speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference.
Image
Mr. Trump with Tucker Carlson in October. Mr. Carlson recently said the president's support for Israel's fight in Iran ran against his 'America First' message.
Credit...
Doug Mills/The New York Times
Up until then, the most vocal opponent of the Iraq war among Republican presidential prospects was Representative Ron Paul of Texas, a libertarian who had a relatively small but persistent and noisy following.
Mr. Trump gave a nod to Mr. Paul in his remarks as he positioned himself as the person who could best succeed with a similar anti-establishment message.
'I like Ron Paul, I think he is a good guy, but honestly he has just zero chance of getting elected,' Mr. Trump said. 'You have to win an election.' Two months later, Mr. Trump suggested a form of aggression that would be acceptable, telling an interviewer that the United States should 'take the oil' in Iraq as payment for its own efforts there.
At the time, Mr. Paul was a fringe figure whose main media attention came from coverage of him as a gadfly. Mr. Trump, able to command seemingly endless media attention, absorbed Mr. Paul's support base and was able to reshape the Republican Party in the process.
But in 2025, Mr. Trump is not the only one who can command media attention.
Mr. Carlson is no longer on Fox News, but he has a show that streams on the website X, and is a leading voice among foreign policy 'restrainers' who have argued that Mr. Trump would be acting against his own movement should he strike Iran.
Stephen K. Bannon, an adviser who was exiled from the White House in the first year of Mr. Trump's first term, has become one of the dominant voices among the MAGA faithful with his 'War Room' podcast, delivering the same message as Mr. Carlson.
Yet Mr. Trump has found that many of his allies will ultimately come back to him, despite unhappiness with some of his decisions.
Mr. Bannon's split with Mr. Trump healed in 2020. And Mr. Trump has frustrated Mr. Carlson before, particularly after the Suleimani assassination in January 2020.
At the time, Mr. Carlson condemned the killing. But by the time Mr. Trump was again the nominee in 2024, Mr. Carlson was one of his vocal supporters.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
White House has suggestion for Jasmine Crockett after Dem calls Trump supporters 'sick'
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt clapped back against Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, after she accused President Donald Trump supporters of being "sick" and mentally ill. Speaking with reporters in the White House briefing room on Thursday, Leavitt said, "It's incredibly derogatory to accuse nearly 80 million Americans of mental illness." "The last time I checked, Jasmine Crockett couldn't dream of winning such a majority of the public as President Trump did," she said. "The America first movement, which President Trump has built, is filled with hardworking patriots. The forgotten men and women, business owners, law enforcement officers, nurses and teachers and Middle America, as we all know from where you all grew up outside of this Beltway. That's who makes up this president's movement," said Leavitt. "And Jasmine Crockett should go to a Trump rally sometime, and she can see it for herself." Karoline Leavitt Pressed On Ramifications Of Trump's Middle East Foreign Policy Leavitt also quipped that she hopes Crockett will continue to be a "rising star" in the Democratic Party, "for the Republican Party, at least." Read On The Fox News App During a recent interview with Katie Couric, Crockett, one of the leading Democratic voices in the Trump resistance movement, explained Trump's reelection as being made possible by a national mental health crisis. "We've got a mental health crisis in this country because everyone, no matter how you affiliate yourself, should be against Trump, period. This is not partisan for me," said Crockett. The congresswoman also went on to claim that former Vice President Kamala Harris was more qualified to be president than Trump and that he was elected simply on the basis that he is an "old white man." Leavitt Balks At Reporters' La Riot Coverage, 'Disingenuous Attack' In Briefing: 'What A Stupid Question' She also said her "heart breaks for service members" in the military under Trump because "the very thing that they signed up to fight against is now their commander-in-chief." "It is really sick and anybody that supports it is also sick," said Crockett. During the same interview, Crockett also defended former President Joe Biden's mental acuity, claiming that she "never saw anything" from Biden that would have made her wonder about his mental sharpness, and argued that his mental acuity was "supreme" to President Donald Trump's. White House Rips 'Shameful' La Riots As Trump Steps In Where Newsom, Bass Failed, Leavitt Says "We all slow down. But I will tell you that I will take a broken — or however they want to describe Joe Biden — over Donald Trump any given day, because, number one, I know Joe Biden's heart," Crockett said. Crockett has also recently taken heavy criticism for other comments against Republican leaders, including Texas Governor Greg Abbott, whom she mocked as "governor hot wheels." This comment garnered her wide condemnation given the fact that Abbott is a paraplegic who uses a wheelchair to move article source: White House has suggestion for Jasmine Crockett after Dem calls Trump supporters 'sick'


Politico
33 minutes ago
- Politico
A judge sided with Trump. Behind the scenes, he was lobbying for a nomination.
On Feb. 12, the court published his opinion in Trump's favor in the defamation case against the Pulitzer Board, and on Feb. 27, he interviewed with attorneys from the White House Counsel's Office. Thereafter, he was informed that he was under consideration for the nomination, and on May 27, he met with Trump, according to Artau's answers provided in the questionnaire. Trump announced he would nominate Artau to be a district judge in South Florida the next day, writing in a post on Truth Social that Artau has 'a GREAT track record of restoring LAW AND ORDER and, most importantly, Common Sense.' In the Senate disclosure, Artau affirmed no one involved in the judicial nomination selection process 'discussed with [him] any currently pending or specific case, legal issue or question in a manner that could reasonably be interpreted as seeking any express or implied assurances concerning [his] position on such case, issue, or question.' Scott's office did not respond to a request for comment. Moody's office declined to comment. Artau's opinion in the defamation case was unusual, in part because the ruling concerned a largely procedural matter. Trump had sued the Pulitzer Board for defamation after he requested that it rescind the 2018 awards given to The New York Times and The Washington Post for their coverage of Russian election interference and ties to Trump's orbit. The three-judge panel in Florida, including Artau, allowed the case to proceed. ''FAKE NEWS.' 'The phony Witch Hunt.' And 'a big hoax.' President Donald J. Trump has publicly used these phrases to describe the now-debunked allegations that he colluded with the Russians to win the 2016 presidential election,' Artau wrote in his concurring opinion. '[T]he board members vouched for the truth of reporting that had been debunked by all credible sources charged with investigating the false claim that the President colluded with the Russians to win the 2016 presidential election.' (The Pulitzer Board has stood by its decision to grant them the award.) Yet Artau's opinion also suggested going further, arguing the Supreme Court precedent known as New York Times Company v. Sullivan wrongly applied the First Amendment in its ruling that required a public official to prove 'actual malice' in a defamation case. While maintaining that the President had satisfied the standard in his case against the Pulitzer Board, Artau called for the Supreme Court to revisit the matter — a controversial position that Trump and his lawyers support. Trump has repeatedly sought to punish news outlets who have written critical coverage of him. Among those efforts, he sued CNN for $475 million in a defamation case that alleged the network sought to undermine him politically. In the complaint, his lawyers argued the standard established in New York Times v. Sullivan should not apply where the media 'seeks to participate in the political arena by offering propaganda.' A judge dismissed the case, but Trump's appeal remains pending. More recently, ABC News and anchor George Stephanopoulos settled with Trump in a defamation lawsuit after Stephanopoulos mischaracterized the outcome of E. Jean Carroll's civil suit against Trump that found him liable for sexually abusing and defaming her. Moving the federal judiciary to the right was a marquee accomplishment of Trump's first term, during which he installed hundreds of judges on the bench and three Supreme Court justices. In recent months, his political operation has become increasingly critical of judges deemed hostile to his agenda and called for impeaching those who have ruled against him. Artau is currently a judge on the Fourth District Court of Appeal in Florida, where he has served since he was appointed by Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2020. He earned his law degree from Georgetown University Law Center in 1988.
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump Celebrates Juneteenth With Wild Rant Threatening to Cancel It
President Donald Trump unleashed one of his traditional holiday rants on Thursday, threatening to scrap the federal holiday that commemorates the end of slavery. Trump chose Juneteenth to claim that there are 'too many non-working holidays in America.' Refusing even to name the holiday, he continued: 'It is costing our Country $BILLIONS OF DOLLARS to keep all of these businesses closed. The workers don't want it either! Soon we'll end up having a holiday for every once working day of the year. It must change if we are going to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!' Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth also downplayed the holiday, requesting that the Pentagon take a 'passive approach' with its Juneteenth messaging this year. The newest federal holiday, which was introduced in 2021 under President Biden, commemorates the end of slavery in the U.S. It's the first new federal holiday since Martin Luther King Jr. Day was declared in 1983. Trump's attitude to Juneteenth was very different when he was on the campaign trail in 2020. He even included a pledge to make Juneteenth a federal holiday in a campaign document aimed at Black voters. Trump reportedly learned the significance of the holiday after a Black Secret Service agent informed him after he found himself facing a backlash for scheduling a rally in Tulsa on that date. Tulsa was the site of a race massacre in 1921, and African-American leaders explained that holding a rally on the anniversary, particularly as Black Lives Matters protests continued around the country, was insensitive. Trump eventually pushed the rally to June 20, tweeting, 'Many of my African American friends and supporters have reached out to suggest that we consider changing the date out of respect for this holiday, and in observance of this important occasion and all it represents.' Trump later attempted to reframe the backlash, telling the media, 'I did something good: I made Juneteenth very famous. It's actually an important event, an important time. But nobody had ever heard of it.' Earlier this year, Trump also signaled his displeasure with Indigenous Peoples' Day, which was adopted as an alternative name for Columbus Day after protests over the controversial legacy of Christopher Columbus. 'I am hereby reinstating Columbus Day under the same rules, dates, and locations, as it has had for all of the many decades before!' he said. Columbus Day, which was established as a federal holiday in 1968, has reained the same status ever since.