At the same time that Donald Trump is facing collapsing poll numbers with voters unhappy with his policies that they believe are making their lives worse, he isAt the same time that Donald Trump is facing collapsing poll numbers with voters unhappy with his policies that they believe are making their lives worse, he is

White House scrambling to pacify activists after 'slap in the face' betrayal: report

At the same time that Donald Trump is facing collapsing poll numbers with voters unhappy with his policies that they believe are making their lives worse, he is facing a revolt from the anti-abotion leaders who are threatening to urge their members to stay home when November's election rolls around.


According to a report from the Washington Post on Saturday morning, the White House scrambled in a Thursday meeting with leaders of the anti-choice movement who are fuming that a promise to ban mifepristone, a pill that can be used to induce abortions at home has gone unfullfilled, but instead has allowed the approval of a new generic version of the drug last year.

The Post is reporting, “Trump and his administration have been more restrained when it comes to championing abortion restrictions,” which led to the meeting where anti-choice advocates were somewhat mollified by some anti-choice policy changes, but feel that the promises made are now being ignored.

There was also anger aimed at Trump for his comments that Congress should “be a little flexible” with regard to the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits federal funds from being used for abortions.

Lila Rose, founder of anti-choice Live Action, complained, “It’s hard to say someone is ‘the most pro-life’ when they are allowing the abortion pill [to remain accessible] and they could stop it, or they’re saying things like they could be ‘flexible’ on Hyde, or they’re taking things actively out of the Republican Party platform that defended life and saying, basically, some abortions are acceptable.”

Kristan Hawkins, the 40-year-old president of Students for Life of America, was more pointed in her criticism of Trump and his administration.

“We are concerned about lethargy we see right now” she said of the White House foot-dragging when there were expectations that policies put in place by President Joe Biden would be gutted by now. “If the White House had time to reclassify marijuana, they have time for this,” she argued..“That, to me, was a slap in the face.”

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Former CNN host and journalist Don Lemon is under fire from right-wing circles for his coverage and alleged involvement in an anti-ICE protest that disrupted a church service in Minnesota, and on Saturday, conservative radio host Melanie Collette insisted that Lemon must “pay” for having "interrupted God’s people.”

Protesters disrupted a Minnesota church service last weekend accusing its pastor, David Easterwood, of working with Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid increased ICE activity in the state. Lemon covered the incident by interviewing demonstrators and accompanying them into the church.

Appearing on Newsmax, Collette was asked about Lemon’s involvement, and whether or not his actions “overlapped into joining the agitators,” an assessment she did not hesitate to agree with.

“Of course it's overlapping to join the agitators! He shoved a microphone in the pastor's face, he interrupted a service!” Collette said. “

Understand, he interrupted worship, he interrupted God's people, he interrupted a leader, and he is absolute playing with fire. I hope he will pay for this – if he doesn't pay for this, by Caesar, secularly, he will pay for it in the long run, trust me!”

Lemon has become a target of the Trump administration, with a top Justice Department official floating this week potentially charging him under an 1871 law originally designed to combat the Ku Klux Klan.

“Whenever anyone conspires to violate the protected civil rights of American citizens, the Klan Act can be used to bring a conspiracy charge,” said Harmeet Dhillon, a top DOJ official at the agency’s Civil Rights Division, speaking earlier this week about the potential charges Lemon could face on “The Benny Johnson Show.”
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Europe and Canada must begin preparing — now — for a full strategic break from the United States.

It is draconian. It is extreme. And it is urgently necessary.

This argument is not born of hostility toward America, nor of contempt for Americans. It is driven by necessity and by alarm, and ultimately by compassion for American democracy itself. This is not an anti-American argument. It is a pro-democracy one.

At Davos, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney crystallized what many allied leaders now privately acknowledge: the U.S. under Donald Trump is no longer a reliable NATO leader, a trustworthy trade partner, or a safe intelligence ally. The foundation of the postwar order, deep and abiding trust, has collapsed.

For 80 years, that trust underpinned alliances, stabilized markets, and deterred autocracy. Today, it is gone. Trump openly questions NATO’s purpose. At Davos, he claimed Europe would not come to America’s aid. That is simply untrue. Europe has come to America’s aid militarily, diplomatically, economically.

The poignant and tragic irony is that America now needs Europe’s help more than it ever has, and in a way it has never needed it before.

The U.S. crossed oceans to help Europe rid itself of Hitler. Today, Europe must metaphorically cross the Atlantic, not with armies but with economic, financial, and political force, to help the U.S. confront its own authoritarian threat.

This is not about war. It is about preventing one, and preventing the slow-motion collapse of democratic governance in the most powerful country on Earth.

European leaders are understandably cautious. Europe still relies on transatlantic trade, intelligence sharing, and defense coordination. But that caution has hardened into paralysis, and paralysis carries greater danger than action.

Trump has demonstrated repeatedly that trade agreements with the United States under his reign of repugnancy are meaningless. Further, for Europe, intelligence sharing is becoming a liability with an ally that can’t be trusted.

At Davos, Trump openly trashed Europe’s leadership, history, and legitimacy. Europe largely absorbed the insult in silence.

Why?

Because European leaders continue to believe they lack leverage, treating Trump like everyone else does, letting him spiral out of control while coddling him. That is an epic failure.

Inside the U.S., there are no guardrails left. Congress is compliant. The cabinet is obedient. The Supreme Court is deplorably deferential. With three years remaining, the danger is accelerating at lightning speed.

A majority of Americans, according to polling, are fed up with Trump, alarmed by his authoritarianism, and desperate for meaningful resistance. The tragedy is that no one with real power seems willing or able to provide it.

Europe and Canada — yes, admit Canada into the European Union now — may be the last actors capable of interrupting this trajectory.

Symbolic threats and contingency planning are no longer sufficient. Europe must begin preparing for a comprehensive strategic disassociation from the United States. That means developing NATO defense planning that no longer assumes America, and accelerating European defense programs capable of acting independently.

It means building trade frameworks that exclude Washington, insulating European economies from the volatility of Trump’s tariff regime.

It means reassessing intelligence sharing. Cooperation with an increasingly politicized and compromised U.S. national security apparatus is no longer safe. Allies cannot continue exposing sensitive sources, methods, and assessments to an administration that has shown allyship with China and Russia.

Most consequentially, Europe and Canada must prepare for coordinated financial disengagement. Trillions of dollars in European and Canadian capital are embedded in U.S. markets and government bonds.

A phased withdrawal, clearly communicated and collectively executed, would send an unmistakable message that democratic collapse carries consequences. This would not be symbolic. It would strike at Trump’s core source of political protection — markets, money, and the illusion of economic invincibility.

Yes, this would be economically catastrophic for the U.S. — hopefully in the short term — and that is precisely the point.

Markets and money are the only remaining forces capable of forcing a reckoning inside an otherwise paralyzed system. Corporations continue to genuflect to Trump. Like Congress, the administration, and the courts, they have proven unwilling or unable to fight back.

Europe and Canada’s disconnection is dangerous and fraught. But three more years of Trump risks far more. History is unambiguous about the cost of appeasement, and Europe knows that better than anyone else.

European leaders may believe that pacifying Trump, accommodating his demands, and cutting “deals,” will protect Europe’s interests. It will not. Getting close to Trump does not buy safety. It guarantees damage.

In response to Trump’s threats over Greenland, French President Emmanuel Macron has suggested deploying the EU trade “bazooka”: sanctioning U.S. companies, limiting investment. That is not enough. There can be no deal on Greenland. No framework. No compromise. Any concession — any signal that coercion works — would invite escalation and weaken Europe irreversibly.

In 1940, Winston Churchill warned that failure to defeat Hitler would mean “the whole world … will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age.”

Comparisons to Hitler are often careless and overused, but the warning about unchecked authoritarianism remains relevant.

Churchill also said, “We shall fight him by land; we shall fight him by sea; we shall fight him in the air.”

Today, Europe must fight metaphorically, in banks, in trade, in intelligence, and in markets. Set deadlines. Impose consequences. Demonstrate that Europe, united, can act.

If allies do nothing, they enable America’s democratic collapse and endanger their own future. Separation from the U.S. is not an act of hostility toward the American people. It is an act of solidarity with them.

Churchill concluded his famous “fight” speech with the promise of liberation “until, with God’s help, we have rid the earth of his shadow and liberated its people from his yoke.” The time to liberate all of us is now, before it is too late.

  • John Casey was most recently Senior Editor, The Advocate, and is a freelance opinion and feature story writer. Previously, he was a Capitol Hill press secretary, and spent 25 years in media and public relations in NYC. He is the co-author of LOVE: The Heroic Stories of Marriage Equality (Rizzoli, 2025), named by Oprah in her "Best 25 of 2025.”
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A longtime Republican Party strategist is cautioning Donald Trump that his days of bulldozing opponents and receiving little to no opposition are drawing to a close, which is a harbinger of worse things to come if he loses control of Congress.

As Naftali Bendavid of the Washington Post wrote on Saturday, the president is getting it from all sides as world leaders in Davos not only ignored his demands to be handed Greenland, but also pushed back, while at the same time at home, his immigration policies have given rise to massive demonstrations, including a strike that shut down the city of Minneapolis on Friday.


Adding to that, the targets of his retaliation campaign are not rolling over and are instead fighting –– and suing –– back instead of being cowed.

Bendavid is reporting, “Foreign leaders, meanwhile, appeared to conclude they had little to lose from openly accusing Trump of thuggery, something they had been reluctant to do before,” while adding that lawmakers like Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D), California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Sen Mark Kelly (AZ-D) have openly challenged Trump's authority believing he will back down.

RELATED: Trump's change in travel plans exposes White House fears he's 'in trouble': report

According to GOP adviser Mike Madrid, one year into his second term, the president is finding he is facing a radically changing political landscape as the polls show voters are turning against him in a stunning reversal.

“I don’t think there is any question. It’s the prime minister of Canada. It’s the pope,” he told the Post. “There is this new energy when our allies are rattling the saber back, and that is in turn emboldening folks at home.”

The Post reports notes that the pushback to Trump is undeniably being effective as his threats to invade Greenland if he didn't get his way quickly dissipated, and the plans to invoke the Insurrection Act at home withered quickly away in the face of resistance.

That led Madrid to warn Trump, ““In the past six months, everything has changed. The fever swamp is still full force, but there is no question there are breaks. The question is, can [Trump] hold it together? And if this is happening before the midterms, imagine what happens if the Democrats take one or both houses.”

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