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Trump rips Massie over Iran strike comments, threatens to campaign for primary challenger

Trump rips Massie over Iran strike comments, threatens to campaign for primary challenger

USA Today16 hours ago

Massie said his "side of the MAGA base" is made up of "non-interventionists" who are "tired from all these wars."
President Donald Trump lashed out at Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, a fellow Republican, over his criticism of U.S. airstrikes on three Iranian nuclear sites and threatened to campaign for the person running against him in the Republican primary next year.
Soon after the military operation amid the Israel-Iran war was announced on June 21, Massie said the move was 'not Constitutional' on X. The day after the strike, Massie said it was 'a good week for the neocons and the military-industrial complex, who want war all the time" on CBS's "Face the Nation."
Massie said his 'side of the MAGA base' is made up of 'non-interventionists" who are "tired from all these wars."
Trump ripped into the lawmaker shortly afterward saying he was 'not MAGA, even though he likes to say he is.'
'Actually, MAGA doesn't want him, doesn't know him, and doesn't respect him,' Trump wrote on Truth Social on June 22. 'He is a negative force who almost always Votes 'NO,' no matter how good something may be.'
Massie and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-California, had also introduced a resolution on June 17 to prohibit U.S. involvement in the Israel-Iran war without Congressional approval.
Describing the bombings of the three nuclear sites as a 'spectacular military success' Trump called Massie a 'lightweight' congressman who was 'weak and ineffective.'
The lawmaker was one of two Republicans who voted against his tax bill in the House of Representatives last month.
'He'll undoubtedly vote against the Great, Big, Beautiful Bill, even though non-passage means a 68% Tax Increase for everybody, and many things far worse than that,' wrote Trump. 'MAGA should drop this pathetic LOSER, Tom Massie, like the plague!'

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The US bombed Iran. Now, the whole world is watching the Strait of Hormuz.
The US bombed Iran. Now, the whole world is watching the Strait of Hormuz.

Business Insider

time12 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

The US bombed Iran. Now, the whole world is watching the Strait of Hormuz.

Good morning. Hallam Bullock here, filling in for Dan for the summer while he finishes his parental leave. In today's big story, US warplanes bombed three of Iran's nuclear sites. Now, all eyes are on the Strait of Hormuz, a 90-mile strip critical to global oil prices. What's on deck Markets: How young people are turning to day trading as an escape route from the usual 9-to-5. Business: Husbands are quitting their jobs to work with their Etsy-famous wives. But first, global investors are on alert. If this was forwarded to you, sign up here. The big story All eyes on Hormuz After US President Donald Trump announced the US had " totally obliterated" three of Iran's nuclear sites over the weekend, oil prices initially surged to a five-month high on fears of widespread disruption to trade. Prices cooled just hours later. Where oil prices go from here depends on Iran's response. Iran's parliament voted to close the Strait of Hormuz — a critical global transit chokepoint for about a quarter of global seaborne oil and one-fifth of the world's liquified natural gas trade. If the Strait of Hormuz were closed, the impact would be felt across the globe, especially at the gas station. You could also expect higher inflation, slower growth, and higher interest rates, Kyle Rodda, a senior financial markets analyst, told BI. Goldman Sachs, meanwhile, said closing the Strait of Hormuz could push oil prices to $110 per barrel. It would also do significant economic harm to Iran itself, which uses the passage for its energy exports. China, the world's largest buyer of Iranian oil, would suffer too. This isn't the first time Iran has threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz. So far, it's never delivered on that threat. We've been working around the clock to bring you full coverage of this critical moment. We've got details from a rare Pentagon press briefing, during which officials revealed the deception tactics behind the mission. We took a closer look at the B-2 Spirit stealth bombers used to drop 14 GBU-57s — 30,000-pound bunker-buster bombs capable of penetrating 200 feet into the earth before exploding. It marks the first time these formidable weapons have been used in combat. New satellite imagery revealed the extent of the damage at Iran's Fordow nuclear facility. We've also gathered business leaders' reactions to the strike, from Bill Ackman to Dustin Moskovitz. 3 things in markets 1. Broke: the usual 9-to-5. Bespoke: stock trading all day. For some Gen Zers and millennials, trading stocks full- time offers an escape from the monotonous grind of a typical job. Three day traders told BI the ups and downs of the trade and how much money they've made from it. 2. Why a top market strategist maintains a bearish outlook. 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The China Wild Card
The China Wild Card

New York Times

time13 minutes ago

  • New York Times

The China Wild Card

Andrew here. After President Trump's decision to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities, there are a cascade of questions on Monday morning. The most pressing that has so far gone largely overlooked is this: What about China, one of Iran's biggest economic partners? Would Beijing quietly support efforts by Tehran to retaliate against American interests? Will it continue to prop up Iran's economy by buying the country's oil? If it stands by Iran, how could that impact the U.S. trade negotiations with China? And, perhaps most critically, what does this mean for President Xi Jinping's calculations about Taiwan, and how Trump might react to an effort to take the island? I spent the weekend talking and texting with policymakers and analysts in Washington to understand what may come next. Perhaps the most intriguing perspective I gleaned was that the U.S. action might actually grant China greater leverage in its broader negotiations with Trump — not less — over trade and nearly everything else. 'The U.S.'s call for China to counsel Iran to not close the Strait of Hormuz adds to the list of things Washington needs from Beijing, the others being its rare earth exports, cracking down on the fentanyl trade, and reducing its trade surplus,' Scott Kennedy of the Center for Strategic and International Studies told me. 'As a result, China's potential leverage grows and the costs to the U.S. from escalating in any domain against China grows.' Many in Washington say that China would prefer to de-escalate the situation as quickly as possible. Bonnie Glaser, who runs the Indo-Pacific program at the German Marshall Fund explained: 'Chinese interests are in a cease-fire, not a wider war. I don't think the Chinese will support Iranian strikes on the U.S.' Indeed, the truth is that 'China is much more important to Iran than vice versa,' Ryan Hass, a senior fellow and director at the Thornton China Center at the Brookings Institution, told me. Consider: About 90 percent of Iran's oil exports go to China, Hass said — but that represents just 10 percent of China's oil imports. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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