DeSantis And Trump Bury Hatchet To Join Hands On Sick Immigrant Detainees Stunt

It is difficult to find any recent photos of President Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis together.

That’s because the two of them have largely been at odds since DeSantis tried to test his MAGA bonafides and was utterly humiliated by Trump on the national stage during the 2024 Republican presidential primaries. Trump has made a point of continuing to humiliate DeSantis since he returned to office, while the soon-to-be term-limited governor of Florida tries to make MAGA amends, his political relevance fading fast.

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The Democratic Party is Its Voters and They’re Doing Just Fine

Last week, I read an article about the special primary election to replace the late Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA). The Post said the race was “animated by growing frustrations with the party establishment” and called the race “an early test of antiestablishment sentiment at the ballot box as the Democratic Party is caught in a tailspin over its approach to Trump.” (Emphasis added.) As it happens, I hadn’t known this primary was being held last weekend. (No excuses, just so much else going on and it was run as a so-called “firehouse primary” on an expedited basis.) The first I heard about it was from a handful of TPM Readers who wrote in to tell me about the surprising levels of energy and turnout they’d seen when they showed up to vote. This contrast caught my attention because it’s one that keeps showing up, paradoxically unremarked upon in almost all the election coverage we see.

On the one hand, the Democratic Party is “floundering,” “directionless,” “lost.” It’s approval numbers are bleak. And then, often in the same articles, you have all this evidence of voter intensity. Turnout. New activism. Lots of new people running for office. What seems like an apparent contradiction resolves itself if you get your terms right. I don’t think the Democratic Party is in a tailspin or floundering at all. In many cases, the elected leadership of the party is. But the elected leadership is not the Democratic Party. The Democratic Party is its voters. Especially it’s primary voters. This is just a signal understanding of what a party is and what constitutes its health or disfunction. I saw a headline a few days ago that was roughly, The Dems’ Latest Nightmare: Primaries As Far As The Eye Can See.

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How Donald Trump’s Media Business Could Influence Domestic Policy

Almost as soon as Donald Trump was inaugurated in January, Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG) began announcing a flurry of business endeavors that experts warn amount to serious potential conflicts of interest. That’s nothing new for a Trump presidency. During his first term, government accountability watchdog organization Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, or CREW, flagged more than 3,700 instances of conflicts of interest between the president and his business ventures. In recent months, Trump has also accepted the Qatari government’s gift of a Boeing 747 airplane, and hosted a black-tie gala for top investors in his memecoin.

But with TMTG, which went public in March 2024, the president’s corporate footprint – and the room it’s created for potential conflicts of interest – is growing. 

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Trump Can’t Decide If Migrant Farm Worker Industry Is a Worthy Sacrifice for His Mass Deportation Agenda

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

President Trump’s flip-flopping on whether to upend the agriculture and hospitality industries for the sake of following through on his haphazard mass deportation agenda reveals one aspect of what his immigration policies have, in part, always been about: punishing blue cities and states.

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Bailing Out

In addition to Sen. Tom Tillis (NC), Rep. Don Bacon (NE) also announced he’s retiring yesterday. There’s a lot of commentary about “centrists” and “moderates” and “institutionalists” out there and how they’re a dying breed. Whatever. This strikes me as something more straightforward. They’re both endangered incumbents. And they see that this bill, certainly now on the way to passage, is a record that basically dooms them to defeat. So they’re out. They can read the winds.

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Bill Moyers Saw What Was Coming

I cannot say for sure when Bill Moyers first developed such a clear eyed-view of the path we were heading down, but I can say that by the time I first started working for him in 2012, as America was clawing its way out of the recession that trailed the 2008 financial crisis, it was already solidly in place. 

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Big News: Tillis Retiring

Classic Trump-era chain of events. North Carolina Sen. Tom Tillis said he’d vote against the “Big Beautiful Bill.” Trump announced he’d choose one of the Tillis’ primary opponents to support. Only hours later, Tillis announced he’s retiring. This is pretty big news for the midterms. Tillis retiring almost certainly makes a North Carolina Senate pick up more likely for Democrats, especially if former governor Roy Cooper runs, which now seems increasingly likely though still not certain.

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Another Perspective on NYC Politics, Zionism, Jews and Everything Else

I’m sharing a post a friend of mine, Victoria Cook, wrote on Facebook about the New York City mayor’s election and Jews and Israel. That whole thing. It’s not a TPM Reader email but I’m posting it in the same vein. This is her piece, not mine. So, in the nature of things, I wouldn’t write everything in the same way or agree with every individual point. But, for me. she wrote with great subtlety about how some Jews experience this bundle of issues. She also captured something that is quite salient to me, which is that this conversation often gets clogged up on the very binary question of whether some thing or some person is antisemitic. Obviously, some people really want it to land there or insist that it not land there for their own reasons. But on these issues, for me and I guess for Victoria too, that’s often kind of beside the point.

In any case, some of this is very internal to the Jewish experience and a specific variant of Jewish experience. And TPM isn’t a site about Judaism. So if you’ve already heard enough on this topic, I get it. But, as always, I share what is interesting to me in the hope and expectation some readers may find it interesting as well. For me this helped illuminate some of my own thoughts and feelings about this that I hadn’t been able to tease apart on my own.

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$40 Million

A TPM Reader pointed out to me that the “Big Beautiful Bill” budgets fully $40 million dollars through what’s left of the National Endowment for the Humanities to the President “for the procurement of statues” for the President’s “Garden of Heroes.”

The Political World’s Five-Alarm Mamdani Meltdown

Hello it’s the weekend. This is The Weekender ☕️

We have a stage five political freakout on our hands. 

In the four days since Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani became the Democratic Party’s nominee in the New York City mayoral election, a lot of people have completely lost it. The reactions have ranged from predictable to deeply disturbing Islamophobia. 

Some of the reaction to Mamdani stems from the fact the 33-year-old relatively junior lawmaker entered the race as an upstart before defeating former Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Mamdani is also a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, which puts him firmly on the left wing of the city and state Democratic Party spectrum. That helps explain why congressional leadership didn’t rush to embrace Mamdani and why the powerful real estate industry — which has enjoyed developer-friendly “City of Yes” policies backed by the current mayor, Eric Adams, and other Democrats — entered into what the Wall Street Journal described as “hysteria.”

Progressives are notably more critical of the Israeli government than establishment Democrats and Mamdani has a history of pro-Palestine activism. These policy differences have helped contribute to what veteran strategist Lis Smith dubbed a “full-on freakout” about Mamdani from the Democratic establishment. And, while Jewish voters are increasingly divided on Israel’s War in Gaza (and around 20 percent were supportive of Mamdani) the Republican Jewish Coalition declared “Evacuate NYC immediately” as the votes were coming in.  

Other reactions included the billionaire Bill Ackman, who made a last-ditch attempt to find a candidate to save him before realizing that the rules mean there’s no room for a new dark horse on the ballot. Ackman ultimately decided to back Adams, who, after scandals, legal trouble, and a save from President Trump, is running as an independent in November’s general election. Another Influential Rich Person in New York City politics, hedge funder Dan Loeb, seemed to use a 1980’s movie reference to suggest the five boroughs have become a crime-filled hellscape where he will be forced to fight for his life. Others on the center, in business, and on the right seem set to throw their hats in with Cuomo, who has indicated he is going to keep hope alive and run it back as an independent. 

Outside the city, Trump turned to — where else — Truth Social to blast Mamdani as a “a 100% Communist Lunatic.” As is her custom, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) went the even-more-apoplectic route with a seemingly AI-generated rendition of the Statue of Liberty covered in a mourning shroud

Some of the meltdown seemed more about the fact Mamdani could become New York’s first Muslim mayor than any of his policies. Following his victory, Mamdani faced what the Guardian called a “barrage” from some who baselessly painted him as a terrorist threat. The most unhinged and purely racist attack of them all came from Rep. Andy Ogles (R-TN), a right-wing lawmaker whose own colorful history has included ethical questions, parading with faux Confederate soldiers, and calling for Trump to have a third term. On Thursday, Ogles fired off a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi calling for Mamdani to be denaturalized and “DEPORTED.” 

The DOJ confirmed receipt of the letter to TPM but declined to comment further. Mamdani’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment. 

Ogles’ letter relied on Mamdani’s past critiques of Israeli policy to brand the mayoral candidate “an antisemitic, socialist, communist.” Mamdani has previously emphasized that he abhors antisemitism. Opting for a megaphone rather than a dog whistle, Ogles also called Mamdani “little muhammad” in his X post about the letter. It’s impossible to read that as anything other than an attempt to denigrate Mamdani’s religion. Ogles did not respond to a request for comment. 

While Mamdani weathered these attacks, even some staunchly pro-Israel Democrats came to his defense. However, others, notably Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), tested the wheels on the bandwagon and took the opportunity to echo the idea Mamdani was a bridge too far. 

There are now over four months to go until the general election, which is going to be a four- to five-way race. Mamdani is the obvious favorite, but it is clearly going to be quite chaotic. 

Perhaps in some ways Dan Loeb and the other hysterics are right. New York is becoming a (political) warzone. Fight for your lives. 

Hunter Walker

Here’s what else TPM has on tap this weekend:

  • The Supreme Court kept its tradition of ending its term with a series of blockbuster, and, in some cases, disastrous cases. The same nine justices will be back next year.
  • Signs may be surfacing of a DOGE-linked disruption in DC’s economy.
  • Has the Senate parliamentarian become too woke?

See You Next Year, Sam Alito

The Supreme Court ended this term the same way it ended last term: with another consequential ceding of power from the judicial branch to the executive branch. 

In a 6-3 decision Friday authored by Amy Coney Barrett, the court ruled that national injunctions, of the sort that are currently holding many of Trump’s most lawless policies at bay, need to be more closely tailored to providing relief to the plaintiffs in a given suit. Judges cannot just shut down a policy nationwide, the conservative majority ruled. They must suspend it only for those involved in the case before them. (It is perhaps notable that this ruling comes now, and not when conservative lower-court judges used national injunctions to sideline policies throughout the Biden administration.)

The upshot of this decision is that the executive branch will have yet more room to behave in illegal ways, unchecked. And the decision acknowledged as much: “Federal courts do not exercise general oversight of the Executive Branch; they resolve cases and controversies consistent with the authority Congress has given them,” Barrett wrote. “When a court concludes that the Executive Branch has acted unlawfully, the answer is not for the court to exceed its power, too.”

In this way, Friday’s decision was similar to 2024’s disastrous immunity decision, exempting the president almost entirely from criminal prosecution. As in the immunity decision, the justices punted the underlying issue to lower courts to figure out the details of how to apply their ruling. Last year, that underlying issue was Donald Trump’s criminal prosecution for trying to steal the 2020 election; this year, it was his attempt to end birthright citizenship. Both decisions suggested that it would be years before the Supreme Court would actually address the case on the merits. 

This consequential non-ruling on birthright citizenship was not the only momentous decision to come down Friday. In another case, Justice Sam Alito wrote for the majority that parents can challenge “LGBTQ+-inclusive” texts in schools, and let their children opt out of lessons to which they object. Another ruling allowed porn sites to be effectively banned in Texas. 

Notably, the Supreme Court term ended with no retirements, meaning the two oldest — and two most consistently pro-Trump — justices, Clarence Thomas and Sam Alito, will be back again in October. Martha-Ann Alito, recorded last year by a hidden-camera-wielding activist, expressed her hope that her husband might soon step away from the “nonsense” of being among the most powerful people in the world so that she can fly her niche right-wing flag collection during Pride month without blowback. (“I want a Sacred Heart of Jesus flag because I have to look across the lagoon at the Pride flag for the next month […] I said, ‘When you are free of this nonsense, I’m putting it up.’”) Now she’ll have to wait until, at least, June 2026.

— John Light

DOGE Doldrums

There are signs the economic fallout from DOGE’s mass cuts to the federal government workforce are already beginning to take a toll on the D.C.-area economy, and maybe even beyond.

Home buying and selling, historically the key to accessing the American dream and building wealth, is showing signs of a slowdown. A Bright MLS survey found 40% of realtors in the DMV area report having deals impacted by the federal government’s workforce reductions, ideated by President Donald Trump and carried out by the richest man in the world who, per Trump, also “lost his mind” — Elon Musk.

All the while, new economic data continues to signal a weakening jobs market and stalled consumer spending. A Thursday Labor Department data drop showed the number of people claiming unemployment benefits reached its highest total since November 2021 while data from the Department of Commerce found consumer spending declined slightly in May.

Real estate experts said a better look at the potential hit on the housing market may come in the fall.

As with Trump’s tariffs’ impact on inflation, the effects of the yet-to-be-finalized, deeply unpopular reconciliation package, and any economic fallout from the U.S. bombing Iran, we’ll just have to wait and see.

— Layla A. Jones

Words of Wisdom

“The WOKE Senate Parliamentarian, who was appointed by Harry Reid and advised Al Gore, just STRUCK DOWN a provision BANNING illegals from stealing Medicaid from American citizens … THE SENATE PARLIAMENTARIAN SHOULD BE FIRED ASAP.”

That’s Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) or, as he likes to call himself (and encourages reporters to call him), Coach Tuberville, reacting to Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough’s decision to strike several Medicaid and health-related provisions out of the reconciliation bill, finding them to be non-compliant with the Byrd Rule.

As you can tell he is particularly mad in this instance because MacDonough nixed the provision that would cut federal funds to states that allow undocumented immigrants to get Medicaid. 

This, of course, has been a major talking point for congressional Republicans as they have been bending over backwards to convince everyone that they are not cutting Medicaid except for the “waste, fraud and abuse.” The reality is undocumented immigrants are already ineligible for traditional Medicaid or Medicare benefits. Some states opt to provide health coverage to certain immigrants, regardless of their immigration status, but those programs do not use federal Medicaid dollars and come out of state’s own funds.

Still, according to Tuberville and other far-right Republicans who tried to sneak in that provision into their so-called “big beautiful” bill, access to healthcare for human beings is apparently too “WOKE.”

— Emine Yücel