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Trump Drowned Out by His Own Bagpiper at His Scotland Event

Trump Drowned Out by His Own Bagpiper at His Scotland Event

Yahoo6 days ago
Donald Trump encountered some difficulty during his comments to the media ahead of his meeting with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday, as the president's own bagpiper played loudly through his opening statements.
The president is meeting with his British counterpart at his Turnberry golf resort in Scotland this morning, where the pair were expected to discuss a range of issues from trade to the war in Gaza. The piper had apparently been invited to play at Trump's course as Starmer arrived—blasting out a performance close enough to the leaders to make it difficult to hear what they were saying to assembled reporters.
After the noise eventually piped down, Trump appeared at pains to sing his own praises during what remained of his pre-talk press conference with Starmer. 'If I weren't around, right now you'd have six major wars going on,' he was finally heard to tell reporters.
'Nobody's ever done what we've done,' the president went on. 'We've done a lot. It's an honor to do it. It's not hard for me to do it.'
Trump's self-administered pick-me-up follows a rocky weekend visit to the northernmost of the United Kingdom's four nations. Though the president's mother was born in Scotland, more than 70 percent of Scots have a dim view of his policies and politics, at a rate roughly 10 percent higher than across the U.K. overall.
His arrival earlier on Friday was hardly met with a warm welcome. Heralded ahead of time by a front-page spread from Scottish daily newspaper The National that read 'CONVICTED US FELON TO ARRIVE IN SCOTLAND,' protesters lined up along the side of the road as his motorcade made its way from Glasgow to his Turnberry resort, many of them holding up signs taking potshots at the president over the ongoing Epstein Files furor.
Demonstrations continued in at least three Scottish cities throughout the weekend, including outside the U.S. consulate in Edinburgh, as well as outside his Turnberry resort and Trump International Scotland in Aberdeen, where one protest group has installed a sign that reads: 'Twinned with Epstein Island.'
Trump has spent much of his time in Scotland so far playing the green (accompanied by an armored golf cart), which would nevertheless appear to have done little to assuage his reported behind-the-scenes anger over his administration's handling of the Epstein crisis—admitting to reporters Sunday, 'I'm actually not in a good mood.'
Those comments came hot on the heels of a meeting with European Union President Ursula von der Leyen that yielded a new trade deal with the bloc, though the arrangement's since been slammed by the Wall Street Journal's editorial board as 'odd' for what the newspaper describes as mostly 'abandoning [his] goals' in trade relations with the continent.
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Rep. Mike Flood booed at Nebraska town hall after defending Trump policies
Rep. Mike Flood booed at Nebraska town hall after defending Trump policies

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Rep. Mike Flood booed at Nebraska town hall after defending Trump policies

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Rep. Mike Flood booed at Nebraska town hall after defending Trump policies
Rep. Mike Flood booed at Nebraska town hall after defending Trump policies

USA Today

time25 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Rep. Mike Flood booed at Nebraska town hall after defending Trump policies

The event in Lincoln, Nebraska, attracted a rowdy crowd that continuously yelled and booed as GOP Rep. Mike Flood defended Trump administration policies. Congressman Mike Flood said he wanted to talk about President Donald Trump's signature legislation and declared there was "a lot of misinformation" surrounding it. That's when the shouting started, continuing for more than an hour as the Republican lawmaker faced a rowdy town hall crowd in Lincoln, Nebraska, on Aug. 4, full of people irate about Trump's new bill and other policies coming from his administration. Audience members in the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Kimball Recital Hall pressed Flood on releasing the Jeffrey Epstein files, accused Trump of "fascism," and raised concerns about cuts to government programs. They yelled and booed continuously as Flood spoke. Trump carried Nebraska by 20 percentage points in 2024, and Flood won his district, which includes Lincoln and other communities in the eastern part of the state, by the same margin in 2024. But the town hall reflected an energized opposition to the new administration. Trump's top legislative priority, a package that includes sweeping tax cuts and deep reductions to spending on programs such as Medicaid, was a frequent target. One woman called the measure a "monstrosity." The president signed the new law on July 4. With the House in recess until September, lawmakers are now home in their districts, hearing directly from voters about the legislation. Polls indicate the measure is unpopular. Trump and the GOP have been gearing up to sell voters on it ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. The town hall highlighted the challenges they face. The crowd unloaded on Flood, who tried to preempt some of the criticism by opening the event with a defense of the law, lauding the tax reductions and focusing on Medicaid work requirements and a fund to help rural hospitals. "More than anything, I truly believe this bill protects Medicaid for the future," Flood said. The crowd booed, and the criticism kept coming. The law is projected to cut $1 trillion mostly from Medicaid and Affordable Care Act insurance plans and eliminate insurance coverage for 11.8 million people over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. A person raised concerns about thousands of Nebraskans losing health insurance coverage. Other constituents focused on the CBO projection that the law will increase the national debt by $3.4 trillion over a decade. With the Trump administration embroiled in a controversy over releasing government records about Epstein, a wealthy financier who died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking charges, one question posed to Flood: "Why are you covering up the Epstein files?" Flood said he favors releasing the records. The congressman was also pressed about how to ensure the accuracy of the nation's economic data after Trump decided to fire Erika McEntarfer, the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, following the agency's release of a report showing weak job creation. Flood said he didn't know the details, but that "if all that person did was get the data out there… and I don't know that's the case, but if that's all they did, I would not have fired her." "But I don't know because things are complicated," Flood added. Contributing: Ken Alltucker

Greene urges Trump to commute George Santos' sentence: ‘It's time to correct this injustice'
Greene urges Trump to commute George Santos' sentence: ‘It's time to correct this injustice'

The Hill

time25 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Greene urges Trump to commute George Santos' sentence: ‘It's time to correct this injustice'

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