Linda Perry wants to help Madonna defend her title as the “Queen of Pop”
Perry
has offered to help the pop icon regain her power after she claimed
Madonna’s recent album releases have suffered from chasing current
trends in the music industry.
“Of
late, I feel she is a follower,” Perry said in a recent interview with
Consequence. “She’s following the trends. She’s trying to compete with
Charlie XCX and this and that. Everything about her seems weak to me and
not powerful."
Linda,
you've got one song performance to your name. Madonna's been out there
publicly hit making since 1983. I don't think Madonna's been a
follower. I haven't liked a lot of her stuff in the last 20 years but I
haven't felt she was following. I also don't get where Linda Perry
gets off thinking she's this hit maker. She's not Diane Warren or Jimmy
Jam and Terry Lewis. She's not even David Foster. But keep trash
talking and see how that sells your album.
The
first time that author Annie Zaleski truly became a Stevie Nicks fan
was as a kid in the 1980s, a decade that saw the legendary
singer-songwriter in the midst of a successful career as a solo artist
and a member of Fleetwood Mac. Although Zaleski’s parents had Fleetwood
Mac’s popular 1970s records in their collection, it was the band’s 1987
album Tango in the Night that stuck with her.
“I
definitely remember hearing all that stuff on the radio and really
loving it, "Everywhere" especially,” she says. “I’m pretty sure I have a
tape [that I recorded from the radio] where I have that song in
particular kind of fading out because I really like that. I was pretty
young at that point. So Stevie and Fleetwood Mac have been with me
through my entire life.”
Zaleski channeled her admiration for the music of Nicks, who turns 78 today, into her latest book Stevie Nicks in 50 Songs
(published by Running Press), which tells the story of the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame artist through the songs that shaped her life and
career, from the 1955 Red Sovine and Goldie Hill song “Are You Mine,” to
the 2024 Taylor Swift track “Clara Bow.” In between are anecdotes about
some of her key solo and Fleetwood Mac songs such as “Rhiannon,”
“Dreams,” “Gold Dust Woman," “Sara,” “Leather and Lace,” “Gypsy,” “I
Can’t Wait,” “Talk to Me” and “Planets of the Universe.”
In
addition to the main text and many archival images of the singer
throughout the years, this immersive book contains sidebars devoted to
other aspects of Nicks’ career, including her fashions, collaborations
and friendships, causes, and place in pop culture.
[. . .]
Chiu:
“Silver Springs” has sort of attained a sense of legend in its own
right because it was supposed to be on Rumours, but instead became a
B-side for a single. And then it received renewed popularity through the
band’s performance of the song for Fleetwood Mac’s 1997 live album The
Dance.
Zaleski: They had too many songs [for
Rumours], and they left it off. And Stevie always loved the song. This
was basically a song that meant a lot to her. What was interesting was
that I discovered that one of the things that precipitated her exit from
Fleetwood Mac in the late '80s was that she wanted to have this song on
a solo compilation. I think it was Mick [Fleetwood] who said, "Nope."
And she was like, "All right. I'm quitting the band." So it was just one
of these things that it was just that it meant absolutely so much to
her.
What’s interesting is that I remember the
performance [from The Dance]. But it wasn’t until later when it was on
YouTube, and it got passed around, that it took on a lot more
significance, where Stevie’s kind of singing the song directly to
Lindsey — as I put it, like working things out on the remix, literally
right there in real time.
Beartooth frontman Caleb Shomo revealed that he is gay in an Instagram post on Saturday, May 23.
“There’s
been a lot of speculation surrounding my personal life as of late and I
feel compelled to set the record straight before it affects those I
love any further,” Shomo, 33, wrote.
“I am a
proudly gay man,” the singer continued. “This is something I’ve been
unpacking and reckoning with in my life for quite some time now. It’s
been difficult to navigate the feelings surrounding the subject and
figure out what to do with this fact.”
Shomo
went on to say he “spent a decade burying feelings with alcohol” and
that he “decided to put it down and focus on exploring why I felt this
way for so long.”
“It’s been a direct path to
me reconciling with my sexuality in hopes that it will eventually lead
to me experiencing self love,” Shomo wrote, adding that he made a vow to
express himself “whole heartedly and fully” on his forthcoming album.
“Wherever
it takes me I will follow and I refuse to water any part of it down,
from the music, to the lyrical content, and way I portray myself,” he
wrote.
Conor
Oberst was only on the third song of "I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning" at
the Hollywood Bowl on Saturday evening when he came to reflect on how
the world has - or, more pointedly, hasn't - changed in the 21 years
since the album's release. "It's this much later and we're in a war in
the Middle East for the sake of rich people getting richer," he told the
audience as he cued up "Old Soul Song (for the New World Order)," a
tune about attending a rally or protest in the Bush era, possibly about
the Iraq war.
It's
easy to remember Bright Eyes' earlier fare as dulcet and poetic; songs
like "First Day of My Life" and "Lua" turned ruminations on love and
heartbreak into resonant indie touchstones. But Bright Eyes' performance
at the Bowl was a reminder that the more things change, the more they
tend to stay the same. Alongside longtime collaborators, Oberst took
over the iconic venue on Saturday to celebrate Bright Eyes'
simultaneously-released albums "I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning" and
"Digital Ash in a Digital Urn," commemorating the 21st anniversary of
both records in a display of millennial nostalgia and a refreshed yet
just-as-fiery condemnation of Trump's government, much in the way that
they'd bemoaned the Bush administration two decades ago.
Oberst
has, of course, been a frank and outspoken critic of the state of
America dating back to his band's ascent in the early aughts. By the
time Bright Eyes released the stylistically opposed albums in January
2005, he'd established himself as something of his generation's poet
laureate, compared in reviews at the time to Bob Dylan and commended
(or, as often, lambasted) for his loquacious lyrics dotted with
two-dollar words. (Much of that generation, it should be noted, owes
Oberst a debt of gratitude for adding "despondent" to their vocabulary.)
Wednesday, May 27, 2026. Chump continues to destroy the economy while
his administration continues to lie about it, he wants to impose NDAs on
all federal workers, and much more.
That's Ben breaking down the latest on Iran this morning for MEIDASTOUCH NEWS.
For reasons that have never been altogether clear, Donald Trump has repeatedly boasted
that he’s successfully lowered the price of groceries. American
consumers know better, and their perceptions are bolstered by real-world
data. The Hill reported
last week, “Federal inflation data confirms what you may have been
feeling already: Groceries are getting more expensive. Unfortunately,
things may be about to get a whole lot worse, economists are warning.”
A few days later, a national CNN poll found that 61% of Americans said they’ve had to cut back on groceries due to price concerns.
A
simple grocery-store habit is getting fresh attention online: buying
soon-to-expire food at a discount and freezing it before it goes bad.
For
budget-conscious shoppers, the appeal is straightforward. The strategy
can turn markdown meat, deli items, and prepared foods into meals that
cost a fraction of full price.
In a recent post
on Reddit's r/Frugal forum, one shopper said they make "a lap around
the grocery store" to look for foods nearing their sell-by date and
stock up when markdowns are steep.
Memorial
Day is supposed to feel like a victory lap into summer: gas tank full,
cooler packed, suitcase in the trunk. This year, it feels like sticker
shock. A snapshot circulated by Ed Elson, host of the Prof G Markets
podcast, on X on May 25, lined up seven everyday inflation categories against last year's holiday weekend and the numbers landed with a thud.
The
headline movers: gas up 28%, flights up 21%, coffee up 18%, beef up
16%, hot dogs up 11%, hotels up 4%. The surprise sitting atop the pile
is tomatoes. A pound of tomatoes costs 40% more than it did last
Memorial Day, the largest single move in the data set and a number
that's gotten very little airtime so far.
Texas
BBQ joints are getting smoked by skyrocketing beef prices, with some
saying the iconic Texas brisket boom could be headed for a painful bust —
forcing owners to consider raising prices, changing menus or even
shutting down.
“This is as bad as it gets,”
Houston pitmaster Russell Roegels told The Washington Post.
(1)“Everybody’s at risk these days. You’re one bad week from closing.”
Roegels,
owner of Roegels Barbecue Co., says in the past year, the wholesale
price he pays for brisket has shot up by 28% to $5.56 per pound. He
recently raised his menu prices for brisket by 6% to $35 per pound, but
fears that could drive customers away.
And he’s
not the only one who is worried. The meat-price crisis has already
pushed several Texas barbecue spots out of business, including Brett’s
BBQ Shop, Kirby’s BBQ, Sabar BBQ and Wright on Taco & BBQ.
To explain the dilemma of setting menu prices in the current economic climate, Isaac MacDougal points to limes.
“A couple months ago, a case of limes was $50,” said MacDougal, founder of Cocktail Mary
and co-owner of Supper Club Cocktail Lounge. Now, because of drought
and supply chain kinks, it’s over $100. He figures when you factor in
the labor cost to squeeze big batches, “the lime juice in a cocktail is
more expensive, a lot of time, than the spirit that goes into it.”
But
soaring food costs are just one piece of the puzzle for restaurant and
bar owners struggling to keep their menu prices in check. Since the
pandemic, they’ve been at the mercy of upsurges to practically all of
their costs, including labor, rent, utilities, taxes, insurance, swipe
fees and packaging.
Since Trump regained office in January 2025, food inflation has increased 3.16%.
Trump ran on a platform to “defeat inflation,” but, as food prices climbed, he said affordability was a “con job.”
Part of the reason for higher food prices is the war Trump started with Iran, which predictably closed the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global oil shipping route. The war has led to high gas prices across the country, and food prices have followed suit.
Recently, Trump was asked whether “Americans’ financial situations”
affected his decision-making when it came to ending the war in Iran, according to NBC News.
“Not even a little bit,” Trump replied.
Trump said the “only thing that matters” is stopping Iran from having
a nuclear weapon. “I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation,”
he added. “I don’t think about anybody.”
As
Americans grapple with rising prices at gas pumps and grocery stores,
President Donald Trump's top economic adviser has framed elevated
consumer spending as a sign of the country’s resilience.
During
an interview with Fox Business on Tuesday, Director of the National
Economic Council Kevin Hassett doubled down on his upbeat view of the
economy, arguing that the knock-on effects of the Iran war are only a
“temporary circumstance.”
“While people have been
spending more money at gas stations, they’ve been spending more money on
everything else, which means that they’re still very, very optimistic
about the state of the economy, and they should be,” Hassett told Maria
Bartiromo, while grinning outside the White House.
What
a moron. What an idiot. Kevin Hassett is a fool if he thinks the
American people are stupid enough to fall for that. They've been
"spending more money on everything else" because "everything else" is
also soaring. Ruth Igielnik (NEW YORK TIMES) reported Saturday:
Concern
about rising prices has reached a fever pitch as Americans sit down to
Memorial Day barbecues across the country. A majority of Democrats,
Republicans and independents said that they had changed their purchases
from grocery stores to stay within budget in the last several months,
according to polling from CNN.
Another 59 percent of Americans said they had cut back on extras and entertainment.
More
than three quarters of Americans, including 55 percent of Republicans,
said President Trump’s policies had increased the cost of living in
their community.
Survey after survey has found
that Americans are feeling growing financial uncertainty. Nearly half of
all voters gave the economy the lowest rating, “poor,” in the latest New York Times/Siena poll, up 11 percentage points since January.
And economic confidence has hit a four-year low, according to Gallup.
Kevin Hassett better accept the reality that the American people are not buying the lies that he is selling.
A growing number of CEOs suspect a market crash is imminent but have been “scared”
to say so publicly out of fear of retaliation from President Donald
Trump, and on Tuesday, one security expert warned that such a crash may
not only be imminent, but “permanent.”
“If
nothing is done about the current situation, Trump’s looming recession
could blow a deep hole in the economy,” warned former Homeland Security
senior official Miles Taylor in an analysis published Tuesday on his
Substack. “So deep that – if it happens before we’re ready – many folks
may never be able to crawl back out. That’s because two explosions could
hit the U.S. economy at the same time.”
Chump
doesn't care about the average American. He cares about building his
ballroom and he cares about creating his slush fund.
He
cares about his slush fund, he just doesn't care about the average
American. He's too busy figuring out ways to enrich his own pocket to
actually focus on the needs of the American people.
“The
GOP is in a silent state of panic.” That’s what a former 2016 and 2020
top Trump presidential campaign official told me this morning. And you
don’t need a Princeton PhD in political science to understand why. The
president's political position as of late May 2026 is the worst of his
career, and the people inside his own party who track these numbers
professionally have stopped pretending otherwise.
These are not soft margins driven by sampling noise.
The
Reuters/Ipsos, Marist, AP-NORC, and YouGov surveys are independently
arriving at the same picture from different methodological positions,
which is the polling pattern that tends to precede a genuine political
crisis rather than the kind of temporary slump that recovers within a
news cycle or two.
The
American people get it Chump is corrupt and focused on enriching
himself. Everything he does is about bringing in funds to himself. Michael Luciano (MEDIAITE) notes:
“Trump
brought the NVIDIA CEO on his trip to China to lobby Xi Jinping to buy
advanced AI chips, even though it would create a U.S. national security
threat,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) tweeted on Friday, referring to
the president’s trip to China, where he was accompanied by Jensen Huang
and other U.S. business executives, as well as Eric Trump, who has
business ties to the Chinese Communist Party. “It turns out Trump also
bought millions in NVIDIA’s stock.”
Eric Trump
responded to the post by saying all family assets are in a blind trust
and are “in broad market indexes,” as opposed to individual stocks:
All
of our assets are invested in a blind trust by the largest financial
institutions in broad market indexes. To suggest that individual stocks
are being bought or sold, at the discretion of any member of the Trump
family, would be a lie and blatantly false. Using a silly example, if
you buy the “Schwab 1000,” you will get some exposure to Nvidia – as
well as a 1,000 other U.S. companies large- and mid-cap stocks. It’s
completely disingenuous to represent anything to the contrary. Please be
better than this…
Rep. Don Beyer (D-VA) responded by linking to the disclosure signed by Donald Trump himself.
“Outright
lies,” Beyer said. “Trump’s assets aren’t in a blind trust, and he
bought and sold individual Nvidia stock in 15 separate transactions
totaling millions of dollars. That’s what Trump’s financial disclosure –
which has his signature – says. See for yourself.”
The
disclosure, which is 113 pages long, shows 2,345 purchases, mostly of
individual stocks, and 1,296 sales, mostly of individual stocks.
According to Fortune,
Donald Trump is the first president since at least Lyndon Johnson to
trade individual securities. Since Johnson, every president has placed
their assets in a blind trust managed by independent trustees. Trump
claimed during his first term that his assets were kept in such an
arrangement, but Fortune noted that Walter Shaub, the head of the Office
of Government Ethics, resigned in July 2017 and concluded that the
blind trust was “not even halfway blind.”
Chump
is a con man and a liar. And both count on silence to get away with
their actions. It's for that reason that Chump is now attempting to gag
the federal workforce. Alex Woodward (INDEPENDENT) reports:
Donald Trump’s administration is proposing a government-wide mandate to require all federal workers to sign non-disclosure agreements to prevent the spread of “confidential government information” to journalists.
Tuesday’s
draft notice of the proposal would require new and existing workers to
sign an agreement to “safeguard” a broad range of government information
from reaching the public after a series of high-profile “leaks” to news
organizations.
The document
broadly defines “confidential government information” to include a vast
amount of information, documents and communications beyond typical
classified and unclassified labels.
No.
No, you piece of garbage, Chump. You're not going to do that to our
federal workforce. You're not going to hide from sunshine laws. You
are human garbage and you will remain in the sewer but you're not going
to drag our government down with you. Brianna Tucker (HUFFINGTON POST) adds that the big exposures came from Chump's own people like Pete Hegseth::
The
controversial form is a stark contrast to the way confidential
information has been handled within the Trump administration, from
contractors to cabinet officials.
Last year,
cabinet officials accidentally texted the top editor of The Atlantic
about active military strike plans on an app the Pentagon had just
warned was being targeted by Russia.
Federal
investigations and court filings earlier this year also revealed that
DOGE operatives improperly accessed, shared, and stored sensitive
personal data while working inside federal agencies.
It's
a tactic Trump has deployed for years. During his first term, he became
the first president to require private sector-style NDAs from White
House staff — senior aides and interns alike. Legal scholars at Cornell
Law School called those agreements likely unconstitutional.
His
most famous NDA battle came with former aide Omarosa Manigault Newman,
who refused to sign a post-departure NDA tied to a $15,000-a-month
campaign job offer — an agreement that would have barred her from
disclosing details of her White House tenure. She wrote a tell-all book
instead. An arbitrator later ruled the NDA "invalid" and its terms
"vague and unenforceable."
Legal experts have
long warned that the government cannot impose NDAs on federal employees
for unclassified information, no matter how sensitive or embarrassing.
Critics warn that the sweeping language in the new proposal could be
weaponized to suppress whistleblowers and shield government misconduct
from public scrutiny.
The public has 30 days to comment on the proposed rule before it can be finalized.
Adam Lynch informs on the social media reaction to Chump's latest nonsense:
Social
media critics whaled on the proposal, with the Freedom of the Press
Foundation calling it “not just absurd, it’s unnecessary and dangerously
secretive.”
“This policy would kneecap
whistleblower protections, undermine the First Amendment, and wrongly
inhibit the public’s right to know,” the association added on Bluesky.
Washington D.C. attorney Bradley Moss also blasted the proposal on Bluesky:
“Federal employees operate under an array of statutory, regulatory and
policy restrictions on the unauthorized disclosure of unclassified
information. The only reason to add this NDA would be to undercut lawful
… disclosures to the media that SCOTUS approved.”
Former
U.S. diplomat William Gill pointed out on X that “This obviously begs
the question, what are they trying to hide now? Federal employees are
barred from unauthorized disclosures of classified information but
they’re also covered by whistleblower protections regarding waste, fraud
and abuse. That’s the likely area being targeted.”
Chump
is an anchor around the necks of the GOP going into the midterms and
he's not their only problem. Their own mouths are getting them into
trouble as well. For example, Troy Matthews (MEIDASTOUCH NEWS) reports:
Republican
Senator Jon Husted voted for Trump's One Big Beautiful Budget bill
which threw half-a-million people off of Medicaid in his state of Ohio,
then he said those who lost their healthcare access didn't deserve to be
on the program in the first place. He later reiterated his support for
kicking people off their healthcare by saying on a radio interview, "I
love doing that kind of stuff."
[. . .]
“Jon
Husted is once again saying the quiet part out loud, claiming the half a
million Ohioans he’s kicking off their health care are not people who
deserve health care coverage," Ohio Democratic Party spokesperson Tony
Wen said in a statement. "Jon Husted could not be more out of touch with
the people of Ohio, and they will vote him out in November.”
Husted
was appointed by Ohio Governor Mike DeWine to fill the Senate seat
vacated in 2025 by JD Vance. He is running to be elected U.S. Senator
from Ohio in his right in November.
Let's wind down with this from Senator Ron Wyden's office:
Washington, D.C. — U.S.
Senator Ron Wyden, D-Ore., voted against advancing the 2027 Intelligence
Authorization Act out of the Senate Intelligence Committee, he
announced today.
“The bill is a dramatic retreat for congressional oversight,
at precisely the moment when scrutiny of Intelligence Community
activities is needed most,” Wyden said. “This bill
would deny the U.S. Senate any opportunity to scrutinize and vet key
Intelligence Community leaders. It also omits critical, bipartisan
whistleblower protections that have been included in the
Committee-reported bill for years. The Committee’s retreat from its
long-standing bipartisan approach to whistleblower protection
legislation is especially troubling during an administration that
commits so many abuses.”
Wyden highlighted multiple troubling provisions in the bill:
Eliminates Senate confirmation for the general counsels of the CIA
and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. At a time of
rampant lawbreaking by the Trump Administration, it is especially
troubling that the only Intelligence Community general counsels
currently subject to Senate confirmation - the people responsible for
offering legal advice on secret, potentially controversial intelligence
activities - would be appointed without any congressional or public
input or scrutiny.
Eliminates Senate confirmation for the Director of the National
Counterterrorism Center at a time in which the Center is expanding its
activities into the realm of domestic law enforcement, particularly
through the NCTC Intelligence Fusion Center, in a manner that poses a
real danger to Americans’ rights.
Eliminates Senate confirmation for the Director of the National
Counterintelligence and Security Center, even as the bill puts the
Director in charge of a new Intelligence Community Counterintelligence
Office in the Department of Commerce, a wrongheaded and unnecessary
expansion of the Intelligence Community.
The bill also excludes a critically important provision that was
included in last year’s bill that stated that, if a company wants to be
an Intelligence Community contractor, it can’t also be a data broker
selling the location data of intelligence officers.
I was thinking about a review of Linda Perry's new
album. I've been listening to it and trying to figure out what I think
of it. Now I'm not sure I care. Rachel DeSantis (PEOPLE) reports:
Linda
Perry is reflecting on the time she was allegedly set to produce a
Green Day album — only to end up on the chopping block after fans
reacted negatively.
The singer-songwriter, 61, claimed in an interview with NME
that Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong ghosted her after
recruiting her to produce the band's follow-up record to 2004's American
Idiot.
[. . .]
She
claimed that her plans with Green Day were derailed by Courtney Love,
who revealed in a 2007 interview that Perry was going to produce the
album — a reveal that drew “backlash” from Green Day fans due to Perry's
work as a pop songwriter.
“And then those guys
just stopped calling me. I would reach out to figure out what was going
on. Nobody called,” Perry said. “I lost six months of scheduled work.
That was f---ed up — all because Billie Joe's a little p**sy and got all
this backlash from his fans and didn't like it.”
You
know what, Linda, calling someone the p-word as an insult is an insult
to women. I don't like it. The fact that you're a lesbian and I have
to explain that to you? Mind boggling.
“Just balls up, man. Not returning my calls was such a p**sy move and I lost a lot of respect for Billie Joe.”
Linda, balls up? P**sy? I think you need to update your vocabulary. It's not 1983.
Add
in that Billie Joe Armstrong is a great guy I know him through C.I.
And Billie Joe is one of the people C.I. has an autographed photo of in
her music room. So I really don't think the way to promote her new
album is to go around trashing Billie Joe.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026. Chump claims deal with Tehran on Saturday and
then bombs them last night, the Justice Dept has a credibility problem
with judges, Chump's slush fund raises new concerns, and much, much
more.
Ben
(MEIDASTOUCH NEWS) observes, "So if Donald Trump thought that this
targeting of Iranian sites in the middle of a negotiation was going to
be helpful, it's having the exact opposite impact."
Saturday,
Chump was announcing a peace deal. No one else was. The Iranian
government wasn't. But liar Chump said he had brokered a peace deal
between the US and Iran. Ian Swanson (THE HILL) notes:
Trump
on Saturday said the deal would lead to the Strait of Hormuz being
opened but did not mention Iranian management of the waterway. The Fars
news agency, which is linked to Iran’s government, said Trump’s remarks
about the Strait of Hormuz were “inconsistent with reality.”
Fars
said that under the terms of the deal, Iran would allow the number of
ships passing through the strait to return to “pre-war” levels, but that
this would not “in any way mean ‘free passage’” through the strait, as
Trump had contended.
Senate Republicans cast doubt on the
viability of a potential peace deal between the United States and Iran
over the weekend as President Trump doubled down in support of his
administration’s negotiations to end the nearly three-month-old war.
U.S.
and Iranian officials have described an emerging framework that would
reopen the Strait of Hormuz and in which, U.S. officials say, Iran would
commit to disposing of its highly enriched uranium. Iranian officials
have also said that nuclear matters would be negotiated within 30 to 60
days.
“It doesn’t make too much sense
to me,” Senator Thom Tillis, Republican of North Carolina, said Sunday
on CNN’s “State of the Union.” Mr. Tillis called the Iranians’
commitment to reopening the Strait of Hormuz “questionable” without a
finalized peace deal, adding that “there are a lot of things that need
to be explained.”
On Saturday, Senator Roger Wicker, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, wrote on social media that a “60-day ceasefire — with the belief that Iran will ever engage in good faith — would be a disaster.”
Mr.
Trump shot back on social media on Sunday afternoon, calling any deal
he would negotiate “good and proper” and saying that such criticism was
coming from “losers, who are critical about something they know nothing
about.” He had announced on Saturday that the United States and Iran
“largely negotiated” an agreement to end the war.
Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) delivered a scathing assessment of Donald Trump's Iran
ceasefire Sunday, welcoming the end of the war while warning that the
deal represents a humiliating capitulation to Tehran that leaves the
United States weaker than when the conflict began.
"If this deal with Iran is real, I will welcome it because every day
this insane war goes on, America gets weaker," Murphy wrote in a
detailed thread on X. "But make no mistake: these are Iran's terms. Our
nation emerges humiliated."
Murphy laid out his case methodically.
The deal, as he understands it, gives Iran billions of dollars to
return to essentially the same position it was in before the war started
— while reports suggest it may also codify Iran's right to control the
Strait of Hormuz, the critical waterway that has remained at the
centerpiece of the violent conflict.
Chump claimed to have a peace deal on Saturday but events and comments have called that into question. Josh Marshall (TPM) notes, "With the latest “peace deal” now perhaps receding into what we might
call the eternal “two weeks” I wanted to provide some mix of guidance or
thoughts on what is going on. How do we go from a peace deal that is
all but inked (despite only being a ceasefire and agreement to
negotiate) to now where the deal is drifting off into the distance and
Trump is adding new demands on Truth Social?" And last night? Another strike. Aaron Boxerman, Tyler Pager, Eric Schmitt, Ephrat Livni and Sanam Mahoozi (NEW YORK TIMES) report:
Hours after
Iranian negotiators arrived in Qatar for talks on ending the war, U.S.
forces struck missile launch sites in Iran and boats trying to emplace
mines, American officials said Monday night.
U.S. Central Command characterized the strikes in southern Iran as defensive and said they had been intended “to protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces.”
The strikes came on a day when Israel signaled that it planned to intensify its fight against the Iranian-backed militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Andre Damon (WSWS) points out, "The Trump administration confronts a deepening crisis over its
failure to achieve its aims in the Iran war. It had hoped that murdering
Iran’s leaders would trigger rapid regime change. When that
failed, it turned to massive bombardment of the country, followed by an
economic blockade. None of these methods have broken Iran’s resistance."
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards warned on
Tuesday that any violation of the cease-fire would justify a “decisive
reciprocal response,” after the U.S. military said it had carried out
strikes in southern Iran. The warning, carried by IRNA, Iran’s state
news agency, underscored the fragility of diplomatic efforts to extend
the truce.
IRNA also reported that
the Guards said that they had shot down an U.S. military drone and fired
on a U.S. fighter jet. The claims could not be independently verified.
Domestically,
Chump's lying has influenced the government. Homeland Security, early
into 2025, established itself as a non-stop liar. This is something
judges learned. When you lie to a court, you make every statement
suspect. If you've lied to them about one thing, there's no reason to
believe that you wouldn't lie again. Sadly, it's not just Homeland
Security that's been lying to the courts. Alan Feuer (NEW YORK TIMES) reports:
Grand juries are the heart of the
criminal justice system, the inner sanctum where prosecutors, working
unchecked and in secret, have enormous power to indict their fellow
citizens.
But under President Trump,
the Justice Department has had serious difficulties presenting cases to
grand juries, running into problems that would have seemed unthinkable a
year ago.
In the past several months,
prosecutors have repeatedly failed to persuade grand juries that the
cases they have brought warrant criminal charges. And if it were not
unusual enough, they have also been admonished at least three times
since last November by federal judges who have accused them of
misconduct.
The latest setback came in Chicago, where a judge cited a remarkable list of grand jury errors as her reason for dismissing charges
against four Democratic activists about to face trial for impeding the
police during a protest last fall at a suburban immigration detention
facility.
The blunders shocked the judge, April M.
Perry, who recounted from the bench on Thursday how prosecutors had
spoken to grand jurors outside the grand jury room — a major breach of
protocol — and had improperly coached them that the evidence they had
presented was particularly strong.
The
prosecutors also stacked the deck in their own favor by removing from
the panel some grand jurors who had voted against them when considering
an earlier version of the charges. Making matters even worse, they tried
to hide these maneuvers by redacting the grand jury transcripts — that
is, until Judge Perry ordered them to give her the full copies.
The
government’s missteps were bad enough to necessitate tossing out the
case against the critics of the president’s immigration plan just days
before it was supposed to go to trial.
But the mistakes also pointed to a more important problem: As Mr. Trump
has demanded more and more charges against those he perceives as his
opponents, prosecutors have felt pressure to push weak cases through
grand juries. And that, in turn, has led to an erosion in faith in the
Justice Department by both the grand jurors themselves and the judges
considering the cases.
You
can't lie to the courts. You can't. They won't believe you after
you're caught lying. But Chump's lied his whole life about everything
so he thinks he can get away with it. As he's learning, no, he cannot.
He has degraded the integrity of various branches of the government.
Chump's slush fund.
David Horsey (SEATTLE TIMES) points out, "The Justice Department was virtually certain to prevail over Trump’s
weak case, but, instead of going for the win before a judge, Blanche
helpfully decided to just give Trump close to $2 billion of taxpayer
money." US House Rep Jamie Raskin announced in THE NEW YORK TIMES, "This week I introduced legislation
to put a stop to this. It would bar the federal government from paying
out monetary settlements to sitting presidents. It would also prohibit
settlement payments for claims involving investigations or prosecutions
related to Jan. 6 or foreign interference in the 2016 presidential
election." But will it be enough to stop the corruption of Chump?
Last week, the Surge explained
the sordid tale of Trump suing the IRS and Treasury Department for $10
billion over the leak of his tax returns, noting that the door was open
to some sort of ridiculous settlement in which the president’s
Department of Justice lackeys would shovel money to Trump and his
allies. And wow did they waltz right through that open door.
This
week, Trump (the administration) settled with Trump (the person), with
the latter getting an apology and the former agreeing not to audit any
of Trump’s past returns. Somehow more egregiously, the government is
setting up a $1.776 billion fund (get it? Like the year 1776!)
for “victims of lawfare and weaponization”—the administration’s term for
people investigated or prosecuted for, you know, breaking a lot of laws
during Trump’s first term and during Joe Biden’s. So who gets the cash?
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche gets to establish a five-member
commission to decide who gets to feed from the trough. We don’t yet know
to whom exactly the money will flow, but we do know when the flow will
stop: The fund expires in December 2028, about a month before Trump’s term ends.
Across the political spectrum, people are aghast over the illegal move to create this slush fund. Patrick Martin (WSWS) offers this take:
The fund—approved by the Trump White House and the Trump Justice
Department in negotiations conducted between Trump and his former
personal lawyer Todd Blanche, the acting Attorney General—is an act of
presidential usurpation of congressional authority without precedent in
American history.
Trump agreed to drop his bogus $10 billion
lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service for supposed negligence in
the leak of his tax returns to the New York Times. In exchange,
Blanche—who takes his orders from Trump and hopes to remove the
“acting” from his title—agreed to set aside $1.776 billion in US
government funds to pay compensation to individuals claiming to have
been unfairly investigated or prosecuted by the administration of
Democrat Joe Biden.
The establishment of the “Anti-Weaponization
Fund” through the actions of the executive branch alone is a direct and
brazen violation of the US Constitution. Article I, establishing
Congress as the primary branch of government, declares: “No Money shall
be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by
Law,” thus vesting the spending power in Congress, not the president.
A
second feature of the Trump-Blanche deal is a one-page addendum,
released by the Justice Department Wednesday, which, in the all-caps
style favored by Trump in his incessant social media posts, “RELEASES,
WAIVES, ACQUITS, and FOREVER DISCHARGES” Trump, his sons and his
business entities from claims that “have been or could have been
asserted” by federal defendants or “other agencies or departments.” This
would include suppressing all ongoing reviews of their tax returns,
which have become a byword for deception and fraud.
This addendum comes just short of two years since the US Supreme Court, in its notorious decision in Trump v. United States,
held that Trump—and by extension any president—was immune from
prosecution for any action he took, no matter how criminal, in the
course of exercising his powers as chief of the executive branch.
In effect, Trump has now been immunized both for his public actions and his private actions.
Todd Blanche has demonstrated that he's incapable of being acting attorney general because he doesn't understand the law. Sabrina Haake outlines the wrongfulness with regards to Chump's attorney Todd Blanche and how he has distorted and broken the law with this slush fund
Blanche, who is legally required to represent the public interest on behalf of the federal government, engineered Trump’s $1.8 billion theft of the U.S. treasury before a judge could stop it.
Trump filed his IRS complaint
in January 2026. By April, U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams had
expressed obvious doubts about the merits of the case because Trump was
both plaintiff and defendant. If a party sits on both sides of lawsuit,
there’s no real case in controversy as required under Article III of the Constitution,
and the court lacks jurisdiction to even hear the case. Seeing the
obvious flaw, Judge Williams ordered both parties to file legal briefs
addressing “whether a case and controversy” even existed by May 20.
Instead of submitting legally vacuous arguments, Blanche sought formal dismissal of the complaint, which was granted. Blanche then announced the “anti-weaponization fund” to “settle”
a case that had already been dismissed on his request. It is important
to understand that after a case is formally dismissed, there’s nothing
left to settle. The court did not approve the ‘settlement,’ having never
acceded to jurisdiction over the claim in the first place.
The $1.776 billion “resolution” was not authorized by any statute either. Blanche claims that 31 U.S.C. § 1304authorizes
it, but the Judgment Fund is statutorily limited to paying legal
settlements and judgments against the United States, which this was not,
because there was no case in controversy, no jurisdiction, the
complaint was dismissed with prejudice, there was no judgment, and no
“settlement” was approved by any court. The $1.8 billion fund is simply
untethered from the law or case, Blanche’s own legal invention to hold
open the treasury cookie jar while Trump dug deep.
The deal Blanche approved in Trump’s IRS lawsuit also granted Trump Audit Immunity
through a highly controversial addendum that forever seals and ends any
IRS investigation or audit into Trump, his family members, and his
businesses. Blanche signed the addendum on behalf of the citizens whose interests he is supposed to represent.
Blanche is licensed to practice law in New York. All practicing lawyers, including those employed by the government, are bound by ethics rules, standards, and commitments. Under the American Bar Association’s model Rules, a
lawyer cannot assist a client in breaking the law, nor can they advise a
client how to commit a crime or fraud with impunity. They can explain
legal consequences, including the scope and application of laws, but
they cannot help their client get around them.
It also gave rapid rise to legal challenges. On Wednesday, officers who
fended off rioters on January 6 filed the first lawsuit to block the
fund. And 93 House Democrats,
represented by former New Jersey attorney general Matt Platkin and his
firm, Platkin LLP, filed an amicus brief challenging the settlement as
unconstitutional. But will this be enough to block payments from going
out? I spoke with Platkin about the legal recourse to the Trump
administration’s brazen new plan.
You are representing 93 House Democrats in a brief challenging the settlement,
arguing that the lawsuit runs afoul of Article III of the U.S.
Constitution and that Trump’s “blatant self-dealing makes this matter a
collusive suit.” Could you walk me through your position?
For
people to get into court, there has to be an actual conflict between
them. They actually have to disagree. Like, you can’t call somebody up
and say, “Hey, I’m going to sue you. You’re going to settle this. Let’s
go in and do it together and it’ll sort of work out for everyone.” That’s
a collusive suit, which is illegal under our Constitution. So, in order
for a court to have jurisdiction, there has to be actual adversity and,
without that actual adversity, the Department of Justice can’t just
settle a suit.
That
prevents you from doing exactly what the president did, essentially
somebody in a position of power or with connections calling up the
government and saying, “Hey, I want you to pay me. I want you to do
something. I’ll just sue you, you’ll settle it out, and we’ll be done.”
That’s what happened here, and that’s why we weighed in. But the 93
members weighed in to say that the judge, even if they settled the case,
could have asked some tough questions of the parties.
Allison Detzel (MS NOW) quotes
legal analyst Andrew Weissmann who states, "I understand why people are
concerned about how the money would be
spent, but I really think it’s important for people to focus on this:
The money should never be used at all in the first place." Because Chump
and Blanche can't create a slush fund. Yes, the money shouldn't go to
January 6ers but there is no money there to begin with. Congress is in
charge of the purse. Congress has not created any funding for this
slush fund. There's so much wrong with this.
Two new lawsuits
challenging the creation of the controversial $1.8 billion ’lawfare”
fund by the Department of Justice were filed Friday in federal courts in
Washington, D.C. and Virginia.
The civil complaints come as several members of Congress have introduced legislation to block the fund, and as President Donald Trump and acting Attorney General Todd Blanche have defended it.
The
two suits say the so-called Anti-Weaponization Fund, which was set up
as part of a settlement of a $10 billion lawsuit by Trump against the
Internal Revenue Service, violate the federal Administrative Procedure
Act. One also alleges that it violates the U.S. Constitution, while the
other says it violates the Freedom of Information Act.
GOP discomfort with Donald Trump is growing. Republicans have effectively blocked taxpayer money for his ballroom, revolted against his corrupt slush fund for insurrectionists, and turned against his war. GOP panic about the his cratering approval and the midterm elections has reportedly escalated amid the ballroom and slush fund dramas. Amid mounting GOP opposition, Trump let out a strange, self-pitying Truth Social rant about his ballroom. Then at a rally he unleashed a weird tirade about the stock market and another bizarrely manic-sounding one
about affordability. The rants only underscored how disconnected he is
from the reality of voters’ economic experiences. We talked to New Republic deputy editor Jason Linkins, who’s been writing well about Trump’s corruption as a major political vulnerability.
We discuss Trump’s growing mania, why these stories are uniquely
difficult for Republicans to defend, and why Americans’ experience of
the economy poses a potentially unsolvable political problem for the GOP. Listen to this episode here. A transcript is here.
Standing
in front of the White House ballroom construction site, U.S. President
Donald Trump appealed for patience from Americans struggling with
soaring gas prices as he sought to justify the cost of a project critics
call a vanity effort.
"This
is peanuts," he said on Tuesday in an apparent reference to the
economic damage inflicted on the U.S. by the Iran war. "I appreciate
everybody putting up with it for a little while. It won't be much
longer."
The
moment crystallized concerns among some in his Republican Party, who
worry that the billionaire president's focus on the ballroom appears
insensitive as Americans struggle to fill their gas tanks ahead of
November's midterm elections.
A
Reuters review of Trump's public comments shows he has mentioned the
ballroom - either via speeches, social media posts, or in comments to
reporters - at least 40 times this year, including nine times this month
alone. By comparison, he mentioned it 35 times in all of 2025.
Concern about rising prices has reached a
fever pitch as Americans sit down to Memorial Day barbecues across the
country. A majority of Democrats, Republicans and independents said that
they had changed their purchases from grocery stores to stay within
budget in the last several months, according to polling from CNN.
Another 59 percent of Americans said they had cut back on extras and entertainment.
More
than three quarters of Americans, including 55 percent of Republicans,
said President Trump’s policies had increased the cost of living in
their community.
Survey after survey
has found that Americans are feeling growing financial uncertainty.
Nearly half of all voters gave the economy the lowest rating, “poor,” in
the latest New York Times/Siena poll, up 11 percentage points since January.
And economic confidence has hit a four-year low, according to Gallup.
But Chump insists that a billion dollars spent on a ballroom would be "peanuts."
Let's wind down with this from Senator Elizabeth Warren's office:
New settlement terminates all
pending audits of Trump, his family, and businesses, creates $1.8
billion taxpayer-funded slush fund for Trump allies
Senators open probe into whether agreement breaks federal laws or is consistent with IRS procedures
“(The settlement) essentially
(makes) it official United States government policy that President
Trump, his family, and many other allies are above the law.”
Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren
(D-Mass.), a member of the Senate Finance Committee, and Ron Wyden
(D-Ore.), Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee, demanded
answers from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) CEO Frank Bisignano on the “outrageously corrupt
settlement agreement” that the Treasury Department and IRS recently
entered into with President Trump. The lawmakers also wrote to the U.S.
Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA), requesting
that the IG immediately open an investigation into this untrammeled
corruption.
“Through this settlement, you and the President have created a nearly
$1.8 billion taxpayer-funded slush fund for the President’s political
allies, including potentially the January 6th
insurrectionists…essentially making it official United States government
policy that President Trump, his family, and many other allies are
above the law,” wrote the lawmakers.
Earlier this year, President Trump sued Treasury and the IRS for $10
billion over leaks of his tax information which occurred during his
first term, creating an unprecedented situation where the President
acted as plaintiff while wielding authority over the defendants. This
week, in exchange for President Trump dropping the lawsuit, the
Department of Justice (DOJ) reached an agreement with Treasury and the
IRS establishing a nearly $1.8 billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund” for
so-called victims of “weaponization” of the federal government. Multiple
Trump administration officials have suggested that January 6th
insurrectionists could be eligible for payouts from this fund.
“This agreement appears to be a brazen scheme to corruptly dole out
taxpayer money to President Trump’s allies and violent
insurrectionists,” wrote the lawmakers. “There appears
to be no binding limitation that would prevent the President and his
family from dipping into the settlement fund for as much money as they
want.”
Just one day after the settlement agreement was announced, DOJ issued
an addendum requiring the IRS to permanently drop all pending audits or
other enforcement actions involving President Trump, his family, his
businesses, and “related or affiliated individuals.”
“This is an astonishing abuse of presidential power and a corrupt
giveaway of an unknown amount of taxpayer funds to the President,” wrote the lawmakers.
“There is no conceivable rationale for this immunity agreement other
than to personally enrich the President and his family by allowing them
to get away with underpaying their taxes or violating tax law.”
The lawmakers also argue that the agreement appears to be illegal on
its face, as DOJ lacks the legal authority to terminate audits unrelated
to a case referred to DOJ, and federal law bars the President and
Treasury Secretary from “directly or indirectly” requesting the IRS to
terminate any ongoing audits.
The lawmakers pressed for more information on the circumstances
surrounding the settlement agreement, including: whether any laws or IRS
procedures were violated with this agreement, details of the agencies’
deliberations on how to respond to the lawsuit, the President and White
House’s role in negotiating the settlement, the list of individuals and
organizations covered by the audit exemption, and the enforcement
actions and audits being dropped due to the agreement.
Senator Warren has led Congressional efforts to prevent President
Trump and his family from corruptly profiting from their positions:
In April 2026, Senator Warren (D-Mass.) and Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer (D-N.Y.), along with Representatives Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) and
Dave Min (D-Calif.)introduced the Ban Presidential Plunder of Taxpayer Funds Act, a new bill to ban the Presidents and Vice Presidents from abusing their power to steal taxpayer funds.
In March 2026, following the Trump sons’ investment in Powerus, a
drone company, Senators Warren (D-Mass.) and Richard Blumenthal
(D-Conn.) sent follow-up questions
to the Pentagon on potential conflicts of interest and corruption
involving the President’s family and the defense contracting process.
In January 2026, Senators Warren (D-Mass.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), and Andy Kim (D-N.J.), opened an investigation
into potential corruption related to the awarding of multiple lucrative
defense contracts and loans to companies associated with President
Donald Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr.
In December 2025, Senator Warren (D-Mass.) and Representative Dave Min (D-Calif.) led their colleagues in questioning seven giant corporations
on their reported donations to President Trump’s White House ballroom
and whether there were any quid-pro-quo arrangements connected to them.
The corporations — Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, Comcast, and
Union Pacific Railroad — all have antitrust business pending in front of
the Trump administration, raising concerns about influence-peddling and
bribery.
In November 2025. Senator Warren (D-Mass.) and Representative Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) introduced the Stop Ballroom Bribery Act
to root out apparent bribery and corruption involving President Trump’s
ballroom, the first piece of legislation addressing the ballroom that
would impose donation restrictions.
In July 2025, Senator Warren (D-Mass.) released a new report
exposing how companies, special interests, and foreign governments may
be pledging donations to President Trump’s future Presidential Library
as a corrupt tool to secure favorable outcomes from his administration.