Breaking News
Breaking News
from Washington and beyond

AIPAC Openly Celebrates Defeat of Progressive Democrats in Illinois

AIPAC is becoming a growing problem for the Democratic Party.

A large screen with the U.S. and Israeli flags intertwined.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
The AIPAC Policy Conference on March 2, 2020, in Washington, D.C.

The pro-Israel lobbying organization AIPAC gloated on social media Tuesday night, after its spending efforts paid off in the Illinois congressional primaries.

While AIPAC lamented that its preferred candidate in the 9th congressional district, Laura Fine, finished third, the organization still celebrated the fact that Palestinian American former journalist Kat Abughazaleh, a progressive, finished second to Daniel Biss, the mayor of Evanston.

X screenshot AIPAC 🇺🇸🇮🇱 @AIPAC While disappointed that Laura Fine did not prevail, voters rejected two anti-Israel candidates in this race—Kat Abughazaleh and Bushra Amiwala. We were especially proud to help defeat Abughazaleh, who centered her campaign on attacking Israel and demonizing pro-Israel Americans.

Biss was preferable to Abughazaleh to AIPAC as the grandson of Holocaust survivors and child of an Israeli mother, even though he has accused the group of having an agenda guided by “no-strings-attached military aid to the current Israeli government, no matter what they do in Gaza or the West Bank” and called it “toxically unpopular.”

AIPAC also celebrated wins in the Illinois 8th congressional district, where progressive Junaid Ahmed, who has called Israel’s war in Gaza a genocide, lost to former Representative Melissa Bean, thanks to the lobbying organization’s astroturfed group Elect Chicago Women. AIPAC also backed winner Donna Miller in the 2nd congressional district.

Still, the organization had to spend millions of dollars in the state and attempted to hide its involvement due to how unpopular it is among Democratic voters. Polls now show that more Americans sympathize with Palestinians than with Israel. AIPAC may celebrate now, but if Democrats successfully recapture the House in November, they will be under pressure to overhaul the U.S.-Israel relationship.

Watch Fox Hosts Freak Out Live Over Disastrous Inflation Numbers

Inflation has jumped significantly under Donald Trump.

Donald Trump looks over his shoulder
Niall Carson/PA Images/Getty Images

Donald Trump’s so-called Golden Age continues to steer the U.S. economy toward stagflation.

The producer price index, or PPI, in February reached 3.4 percent year-over-year, the biggest jump in producer prices in a year, according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report released Wednesday. 

“These numbers are much hotter than expected, guys,” said reporter Sheryl Casone on Fox Business’s Mornings With Maria.  

Casone explained that February’s inflation numbers had exceeded all of Wall Street’s estimates. PPI was 0.7 percent month-over-month, which was 0.5 percent higher than estimated. The year-over-year PPI was also 0.5 percent higher than estimated. 

These high inflation numbers follow a period of dismal job creation and weakened growth for the U.S. economy. The combination of high unemployment, stagnant growth, and rising inflation typically means one thing: stagflation is coming—if it’s not here already. 

“Yeah, this is not good,” said Joel Shulman, financial analyst and founder of ERShares, an asset management company. Shulman said that this would likely prevent the Federal Reserve from cutting rates for at least a couple of months. 

“This is probably gonna be negative for the markets, and we’re gonna see, we’re probably gonna see the markets ticking down even further in the next couple days,” he told Fox. “So this is not good news.”

Over on CNBC, the hosts didn’t mince words about how bad February’s PPI numbers were.

“It’s almost the worst of both worlds. I guess stagflation would come close to describing the situation,” contributor Rick Santelli said

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos earlier this year, Trump claimed that his administration had “defeated” inflation and that the U.S. had “virtually no inflation.” It wasn’t true at the time, and it certainly isn’t true now. 

Trump Floats Extreme, Typo-Ridden Plan to Force Allies Into Iran War

This comes after Trump claimed he doesn’t need anyone’s help with his war.

Donald Trump points while speaking
Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images

Since he started his war on Iran, President Trump has gone from not needing help to begging for it regarding the Strait of Hormuz passageway. Now on Wednesday he’s threatening—in a typo-laden post—to abandon the key trading route entirely.

“I wonder what would happen if we ‘finished off’ what’s left of the Iranian Terror State, and let the Countries that use it, we don’t, be responsible for the so called ‘Straight?’” Trump wrote early Wednesday morning (before reposting with the correct spelling). “That would get some of our non-responsive ‘Allies’ in gear, and fast!!! President DJT.”

Trump Truth Social screenshot
Trump Truth Social screenshot

It seems clear that the president expected his attack on Iran to be similar to that on Venezuela—in and out, while picking the country’s next leader. That couldn’t be further from the case here. Now, after killing more than 1,200 Iranian civilians to take out a nuclear program he claimed was destroyed months ago, Trump is left with no victory, no solution, and skyrocketing gas prices as Iran retaliates by blockading the Strait of Hormuz.

The European allies he asked for help rebuffed him, and now—like a petulant child—he is threatening to flip the whole board game over and leave the rest of the world to clean up the mess.

“Worthless Pile of Sh*t”: Trump Voter Rips Into Him Over Iran War

Donald Trump’s supporters are tired of his broken promises.

Donald Trump, seen in profile, looks down during an event
Win McNamee/Getty Images

You want to know how Donald Trump’s disastrous war in Iran is going? One of the president’s own supporters just called him a “worthless pile of shit.”

During a segment about the response to rising gas prices on NBC’s Meet the Press NOW Tuesday, politics reporter Jonathan Allen spoke to Pennsylvania resident Amanda Robbins at a gas station in Millersburg.

“If you could say something to President Trump and he was gonna hear you right now, what would it be?” Allen asked.

“You are a worthless pile of shit,” Robbins said.

“And you voted for him how many times?”

“Three times. That was my bad, apparently I’m an idiot,” she said.

Allen spoke to three other Trump voters who said they were willing to pay slightly higher gas prices, either because they believed in the cause of the war or they trusted Trump. Millersburg is located in a swing district in a swing state that Trump won in 2024. In Pennsylvania, the price of gas Monday was $3.76, up more than 60 cents from a month ago.

As Trump’s supporters have turned on him, the president is lashing out against his critics.

“THEY ARE NOT MAGA, I AM, and MAGA includes not allowing Iran, a Sick, Demented, and Violent Terrorist Regime, to have a Nuclear Weapon to blow up the United States of America, the Middle East and, ultimately, the rest of the World,” Trump wrote in a lengthy rant on Truth Social Sunday. “MAGA is about stopping them cold, and that is exactly what we are doing.”

Of course, Trump ran on a promise of no more wars and America First—before launching an increasingly expensive military campaign in Iran at Israel’s bidding. Is it any surprise that people are saying MAGA is dead?

Trump Team Caught Off Guard by How Official Quit in Protest Over Iran

The White House knew Joe Kent was going to resign as head of counterterrorism, just not how he planned to do it.

Ex-Director of the National Counterterrorism Center Joe Kent tilts his head while sitting in a House committee hearing
SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images

The White House was completely blindsided by ex–National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent’s political resignation.

The top counterterrorism official alerted the White House Monday that he would be leaving his post over the war with Iran, claiming that Tehran “posed no imminent threat to our nation” and that America’s ongoing involvement was due to “pressure” from Israel and its U.S. lobby.

Kent’s resignation sparked a maelstrom across Washington, where top Republicans and Trump officials spent the better part of Tuesday disparaging Kent and his work, branding the Trump appointee a “crazed egomaniac.”

But the backlash was, in large part, due to the fact that Kent’s abrupt exit was announced online and on government letterhead—which caught the president and his staff completely off guard, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

Key Republicans ripped Kent apart over the span of 24 hours, including the likes of House Speaker Mike Johnson, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, and former White House deputy chief of staff Taylor Budowich, who uniformly attacked Kent’s credibility and his influence in the government.

But the message wasn’t just for Kent. Instead, the size and scope of their reaction was a message to other Trump officials, warning them of the fallout if they publicly criticize the war.

Senior administration officials told The Guardian that prior to his exit, Kent was suspected of leaking information to the press, a suspicion that got him booted from both the presidential daily brief process and deliberations over Iran.

So far, 13 U.S. soldiers have been killed in the conflict, as have more than 20 Iranian officials, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. More than 1,400 Iranian civilians have been killed, including dozens of children at a girls’ school in the country’s south. Some 3.2 million people have been displaced, as the U.S.-Israeli strikes have damaged more than 42,000 civilian sites—such as homes, hospitals, and schools—across Iran, according to Iranian government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani.

Trump told reporters Tuesday that he would withdraw from the war “in the very near future” but that he wasn’t ready to leave yet. Leaving may not be a feasible option anytime soon, however. The president’s allies have recently noticed a shift in power, warning that while the early days of the war may have indicated an immediate victory, prolonged U.S. involvement in the conflict has dramatically increased the likelihood of boots on the ground. The changing tide has fueled concern that Trump could draw the country into yet another open-ended Middle East conflict.