MAGA Mike And Trump Unhappy With Senate ‘Vote’ On Epstein

House Speaker Mike Johnson was not pleased after the Senate quickly approved legislation Tuesday, forcing the Justice Department to release more information about the case it built against the late convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. Johnson also tried to claim he did not reverse his position on the Epstein files, which he did indeed reverse after months. And yet, now he said he is “disappointed” with the vote to release the files, saying he and Trump “Both have concerns.” And he added, “I don’t know” if Trump will veto it. “Any reaction to Leader Thune using the bill without adding amendments or changing it?” MS NOW reporter Mychael Schnell asked. ‘I’m deeply disappointed in this outcome,” Johnson said. “I was just told that Chuck Schumer rushed it to the floor and put it out there preemptively. It needed amendments,” he insisted. “I just spoke to the president about that. We’ll see what happens. So, do you think he may veto it?” Schnell asked. “You say you spoke to the president? I’m not saying that,” Johnson said. “Is he supportive of it in its current form?” the reporter asked. “We both have concerns about it, so we’ll see,” Johnson said. Oh, that’s nice. So, Trump, who claims he won’t veto the bill, was just given an out by Johnson to do so. “We’ll see!”.

‘Expect a cage match’: Trump’s succession plan ‘under threat’ from these Republicans

Although President Donald Trump has previously floated Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio as his heirs apparent in 2028, that plan is under threat as new Republicans mull a 2028 run, Newsweek reports. Recent cracks in the MAGA base over the release of the files pertaining to late convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and support of far-right influencer Nick Fuentes, among other things, may make it “difficult for Trump to rally his supporters around whoever he favors,” Newsweek explains. And while Trump has previously floated the unconstitutional idea of running for a third term, that notion has been dismissed, and instead, he is “likely to attempt to cement his influence on U. S. politics by choosing a successor, and whoever follows him will be responsible for guiding the Republican Party through future elections and continuing MAGA policies and the president’s legacy,” Newsweek says. A most recent poll by Polymarket shows Vance has a 56 percent chance of becoming the Republican nominee in 2028, while Rubio is a distant second, with an 8 percent chance. But now that others may enter the field, that could change. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene who has emerged as a vocal critic of Tucker Carlson, is also reportedly weighing a run, despite poor early polling in which he currently has 4 percent support, trailing Vance who polls at 42 percent according to a separate YouGov poll. In that same poll, Trump’s eldest son Donald Trump Jr., came in distant second at 13 percent. Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, whose 2024 presidential campaign was eviscerated by Trump, sits at 7 percent and Rubio is narrowly ahead of Cruz at 5 percent. Calvin Jillson, a politics professor at Southern Methodist University “The 2028 presidential race, with no incumbent in the fight, will likely draw at least a dozen contenders, maybe many more on the Democrat side. Though things could change in the coming months, Trump’s vice president, JD Vance, is a strong favorite for the Republican nomination” Jillson says.”Rubio, Cruz, maybe Tucker Carlson, will wrestle him for it, but the question for Vance and Rubio is how they can stay close enough to Trump to win the nomination without staying so close that Trump’s baggage becomes theirs in the general election,” he adds. Vance’s path to the nomination may not be smooth, though, Jillson says, adding that “only if the Trump administration founders will Cruz and Carlson become relevant. But if it happens, expect a cage match, as Trump might say, ‘like no one has ever seen before.'”.

Grijalva is sworn in to House, pledges to force Epstein disclosure

Arizona Democrat Adelita Grijalva was sworn in to the House Wednesday after a record 50-day wait, vowing to immediately join an effort to disclose files related to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Grijalva had expressed no special interest in the Epstein case prior to her Sept. 23 election. But she became intertwined in the fate of a bipartisan effort to disclose Justice Department files related to the disgraced financier after it became clear she could provide the final necessary signature on a discharge petition forcing a House vote on the matter.