Hope For America with Heather Delaney Reese

Trump attacks CNN’s Kaitlan Collins in bizarre Oval Office tirade

17 min · 5. juni 2026
episode Trump attacks CNN’s Kaitlan Collins in bizarre Oval Office tirade cover

Beskrivelse

At 3:50 p.m. today, the President of the United States suddenly reappeared after not being seen at any public events since his visit to Walter Reed Medical Center over a week ago. With bad news mounting all around him and questions surrounding his declining health growing louder by the day, Donald Trump was forced to make an appearance. For 43 minutes, Trump and his enablers attempted to present a powerful, in-control leader. But all the world saw was a paranoid man attacking a journalist as "a young, beautiful woman who never smiles" with "hatred in her eyes," and desperately trying to maintain the illusion that everything was under control. Based on the events of 6-3-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump's first public appearance in over a week, with his left hand gripping his right, holding it down * His face puffy and his right eye swollen and nearly shut at times while walking * He kept slurring his speech, then snapping back, erupting, then going flat and monotone * He spent the first several minutes of his reappearance talking about the reflecting pool on the National Mall * Standing where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered "I Have a Dream," Trump's mind went to crowd size: "I had more people. They were tighter. My people were tighter" * He signed two executive orders, one stripping job protections from roughly 8,000 senior federal workers, making them fireable at will * Why these protections exist and what removing them means for dissent inside government * Trump on his $1.776 billion slush fund: "I love it. I think it's so important" * Trump on the Iran war: "It's not a big thing for us" * Trump bragging about his own Truth Social posts on communism: "I just wrote that. Did you like it? Did you think it was well written?" * He called the governor of Illinois "a slob" and the mayor of Chicago "a low IQ person" * Trump suddenly ended the event with no conclusion. Staff immediately moved: "Thank you, press. Thank you, press" * A familiar pattern: something changes, the event ends abruptly, the room clears * Trump's attack on CNN's Kaitlan Collins: "There's something wrong with you" * Why he attacks the press: if he can make us distrust the people whose job is to tell us what is happening, then it does not matter what they report * Scott Pelley, after 37 years at CBS, was fired one day after accusing new leadership of "murdering" 60 Minutes * Pelley said new management instructed him to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story * He said politicians were being invited to choose which correspondents would interview them * Why mainstream outlets will keep falling, and why independent voices are the answer * The House passed a war powers resolution telling Trump to end the Iran war, 215 to 208 * Four Republicans crossed over and voted with Democrats * Why Trump's greatest fear is disloyalty, and why his own party is starting to break ranks He is pushing people past their breaking point. The cruelty, the paranoia, the way even the smallest perception of disloyalty has become unforgivable to him, is starting to cost him the very people who used to protect him. They are watching him slur and drift and lash out, and they are doing the math too. And one by one, they are starting to step away. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment

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episode Trump just revealed that he made over $2.2 Billion in 2025 cover

Trump just revealed that he made over $2.2 Billion in 2025

At 10:34 Eastern Time in the morning, the Supreme Court released one of the most consequential constitutional decisions of our lifetime. For months, America had been waiting to see whether one of the oldest promises in our Constitution would survive, or whether Donald Trump's Supreme Court would fundamentally rewrite who gets to be an American. For nearly two hours after the ruling came down, Donald Trump was nowhere to be found. And when he finally broke his silence, he told the country exactly how he views the Constitution: as an obstacle to get around. Based on the events of 6-30-2026 The Breakdown: * The Supreme Court upheld birthright citizenship, protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, in a 5-4 decision on the constitutional question * Chief Justice Roberts: "Citizenship, then and now, was the right to have rights. We keep that promise today" * The court affirmed United States v. Wong Kim Ark, settled law for 128 years * Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch dissented. Kavanaugh voted to strike the order but refused to join Roberts on the constitutional question * Kavanaugh wrote the roadmap: Congress could pass legislation creating exceptions, and he would uphold it * Why the next time this comes before the court, it takes only one justice changing sides * Trump's response: Congress can "easily make it up" and end birthright citizenship through legislation * Trump congratulating "President Xi, and the Great Country of China, on their massive Birthright Citizenship WIN" * A separate 6-3 ruling struck down federal limits on how much political parties can spend in coordination with their candidates * The case was brought by the NRSC, NRCC, and J.D. Vance when he was a Senate candidate * Justice Kagan's warning: a party can now serve as a candidate's personal checking account, funneling up to $500,000 around the $7,000 limit * How the old guardrail worked and what its removal means heading into November * The Peter Thiel connection to Vance, and how this was a years-long project * The Wall Street Journal reported Trump held conversations with Hegseth and Caine about returning to all-out war with Iran * Trump's own 2011 and 2012 posts accusing Obama of planning to start a war with Iran to get reelected, describing his own playbook * Trump's 927-page financial disclosure, compared to Obama's 8 pages and Biden's 11 * $635 million in royalties from the $TRUMP meme coin, which has collapsed 98 percent while more than a million investors lost $2.3 billion * More than $500 million from World Liberty Financial, with an Emirati royal purchasing a 49 percent stake before advanced AI chips were approved for the UAE * Stock purchases timed to FTC trials and ICE contracts, and foreign property deals in Saudi Arabia and the UAE * Why every margin he is trying to hold, the war, the money, the courts, the elections, is the same slim margin * The Brookings data: Republicans have underperformed 2024 in every single special election this cycle The Constitution held today by a single vote. The distance between a ceasefire and a ground invasion is one conversation. The House majority is five seats. The margin that matters most is the one we control. In 2020, the system held because the people made it hold, by showing up in numbers too large to steal. That is what this moment requires again. A win so large it overwhelms the infrastructure of denial. And we are already building it. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

2. juli 202623 min
episode "The greatest increase in presidential power in the last 100 years" cover

"The greatest increase in presidential power in the last 100 years"

At 3:29 in the afternoon, the President of the United States sat alone behind the desk in the Oval Office. Only hours earlier, the Supreme Court had handed him one of the most dangerous expansions of presidential power in nearly a century, a decision one justice warned gave the presidency authority "unknown even to the English Crown." And with all of that new power resting beneath his firmly clasped hands, Donald Trump spent fourteen minutes signing an executive order about the right to repair cars, telling a story about people being arrested for fixing their vehicles before admitting, "That's not even believable." Based on the events of 6-29-2026 The Breakdown: * In a 6-3 decision in Trump v. Slaughter, the Supreme Court ruled the president can fire the leaders of independent federal agencies for any reason or no reason at all * The ruling overturned Humphrey's Executor, a 1935 precedent that protected independent agencies for 91 years * What independent agencies are and why they existed: the FTC, NLRB, FCC, NRC, and others whose leaders could only be removed "for cause" * Justice Sotomayor read her dissent from the bench, warning the ruling gives the president "a power unknown even to the English Crown against which the Founders revolted" * Rebecca Slaughter, the fired FTC commissioner, warned of a president who can "reward his friends and punish his enemies with impunity" * Trump's three Truth Social posts celebrating "the Greatest Increase in Presidential Power in the last 100 years" * Why there is no longer continuity: every incoming president can now fire every agency head on day one * What this tells the world about the durability of any agreement or partnership with U.S. agencies * The danger of installing loyalists at agencies regulating food safety, workplaces, financial markets, and nuclear plants * A separate 5-4 ruling gave Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook due process protection, carving out a Fed exception * Why Sotomayor called the reasoning "a half-baked theory of executive power" * In Watson v. RNC, a 5-4 opinion by Barrett protected states counting mail-in ballots postmarked on time, a genuine victory for November * Trump calling that ruling "a tremendous loss" and naming five Republican senators as "Hold Outs" * The Court declined to hear Trump's E. Jean Carroll appeal, leaving the finding that he sexually abused her intact * Trump asked whether he would sign the bipartisan housing bill: "It's a yawn" * The golden eagle Trump mounted on the White House, and the history of oversized eagle imagery in authoritarian regimes We are four months and five days from the midterms. Taking back both chambers is about subpoena power, hearings, and building the record for impeachment and removal, of both Trump and Vance. Tonight I am not just warning that we have to move faster. I am saying it as a promise. Donald Trump loves to be the first to do things. He might just be the first president actually removed from office, and his vice president along with him. He has more power today than yesterday. But in four months, the American people speak. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

I går19 min
episode Trump's got a new plan for 47 maple trees at Lafayette Square to honor himself cover

Trump's got a new plan for 47 maple trees at Lafayette Square to honor himself

Early Sunday morning, dressed entirely in black except for a pair of crisp white golf shoes, the President of the United States walked slowly through the rain to tour his latest construction project: a public golf course. From there, his grand tour of Washington, D.C., continued from one renovation project to the next, eventually stopping at Lafayette Square, where reports say he personally demanded that exactly 47 of his favorite maple trees be planted to commemorate himself. Donald Trump isn't preserving our nation's capital. He is reshaping it in his own image. Based on the events of 6-28-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump toured East Potomac Golf Links in the rain during "executive time," reviewing renovation plans * At Lafayette Square, reports say he demanded 47 maple trees be planted to commemorate himself as the 47th president * A running list of his vanity projects: the demolished East Wing, the $600 million ballroom, the paved-over Rose Garden, the Reflecting Pool, and his name on the Kennedy Center until a judge ordered it removed * A planned 250-foot triumphal arch near Arlington National Cemetery * The Lafayette Square project bypassed federal review panels entirely, with no contracting documents posted * Clark Construction, the same contractor building his ballroom, got a sole-source $17.4 million contract for fountain work the Biden administration estimated at $3.3 million * The National Park Service invoked a rarely used "urgency" exemption, usually reserved for wars and natural disasters * Senator Richard Blumenthal opened an investigation into whether taxpayer dollars are being funneled to Clark Construction as a reward * Trump's Truth Social rant praising himself for restoring 73 statues and blaming "Radical Left Vandals" for the algae * His claim that a redesigned East Potomac course would host the U.S. Open, Ryder Cup, and PGA Championship, with no mention of who pays * Why these projects matter: physical spaces in a capital are symbols that tell future generations who we were and whose legacy to remember * How authoritarian leaders blur the line between the country and the ruler until people associate one man with the nation itself * The contrast: Trump counting maple trees while wars escalate, troops sit under missile threats, and families face economic uncertainty * The danger of normalcy, and the families in immigration holding cells who are not having a normal Sunday * Joe Biden at the Maryland Democratic gala calling Trump "a loser" and naming "the brazen, blatant corruption" * Biden on the January 6 compensation: "These people don't deserve to be compensated. They deserve to be put in jail" * Biden to the crowd: "It's time to get up, dammit. Get up. Get up, now" The gap between what this country looks like on a quiet Sunday evening and what is actually being done in our name is the gap authoritarians rely on. They count on normalcy and silence. We are not at the end of this story. We are still in the part where it can be stopped. But only if people use their voices, all of them, right now. The midterms are 128 days away. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

30. juni 202614 min
episode Inside Trump’s plan to end the separation of church and state cover

Inside Trump’s plan to end the separation of church and state

At 3:37 in the afternoon, Donald Trump sat with his shoulders slumped forward, his eyes closed as he fought to stay awake while a circle of handpicked far-right religious power brokers stood packed tightly behind him. They were there as members of his Religious Liberty Commission, the people now laying the ideological foundation for the moral vision of his presidency. And their strategy was summed up in a single sentence spoken by the chairman: "Again, the separation of church and state is not in the Constitution." Based on the events of 6-27-2026 The Breakdown: * Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, chair of Trump's Religious Liberty Commission, declared the separation of church and state "should have no power over people of all faiths ever again in America" * Patrick to Trump: "No president in our history has stood more for God than this president" * The commission placed a 224-page draft report, "America's First Freedom," on Trump's desk * Among its recommendations: repealing the Johnson Amendment, which bars tax-exempt churches from endorsing candidates * Why removing that guardrail matters: when the rules become inconvenient, they change the rules rather than their behavior * A DOJ Religious Liberty Task Force, religious liberty hotlines, and judges with records of favoring religious expression * The commission was filled almost entirely by conservative Christians, with its first hearing opening with a prayer "in Jesus' name" * Seven lawsuits have been filed against the commission for violating federal law requiring ideological diversity * Trump at the Faith and Freedom Coalition: "We saved religion, it was going down" * The real purpose revealed: "Everyone needs to get out and vote in the midterms. If we don't, everything that we've gotten" could be undone * The Texas State Board of Education voted to make Texas the first state to require public school students read the Bible, K-12 * Specific translations mandated, including the King James Version, with no other religious tradition on the list * Trump posting a fake image of himself as Atlas holding the Earth, two months after posting one of himself as Jesus * How truly faithful people feed the hungry and shelter the homeless, while this administration guts Medicaid and slashes food assistance * Why this is not a revival but a takeover, and the tool is control, not scripture * How Franco, the Taliban, and Iran's Islamic Republic all wrapped power in religion, where the faith was never the point * Why every move is happening now: their polling is slipping, special elections break against them, and they are desperate * Why the report is still a draft open for public comment until July 12th, and the Texas mandate does not take effect until 2030 This country was not founded as a Christian nation. It was founded by people fleeing religious persecution who understood what happens when the state claims to speak for God. They wrote the First Amendment to protect the people from a government that would use religion as a weapon. That protection has stood for 250 years. It can survive Donald Trump, too. But only if we refuse to surrender it. And we never will. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

29. juni 202618 min
episode Mike Johnson warns communism is "on our own shores" cover

Mike Johnson warns communism is "on our own shores"

At 12:49 p.m. this afternoon, Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House, stepped up to the podium before a packed ballroom of conservative influencers, Republican donors, and evangelical leaders at the Faith & Freedom Coalition's Road to Majority Conference. But Mike Johnson wasn't there to lay out a vision for America. He was there to convince a room full of powerful people that if Republicans lost power, they would become the next targets. And then he said something that should define the rest of this election cycle: "I run the protection program. I'll take care of you." Based on the events of 6-26-2026 The Breakdown: * Speaker Mike Johnson warned the room about "little mini Mamdanis" running for Congress, calling them "the most radical people who have ever run for office" * He compared the American left to the overseas communist threat Reagan warned about, saying "It's now on our own shores in our own homeland" * A "greatest hits list" of accusations against Democratic candidates with no evidence offered * On a poll about Democratic voters: "Go, go, go. We can't deport that many," joking about deporting American citizens for their politics * The defining moment: if Republicans lose, "they'll go after the president's family, the cabinet, his donors and friends. Half of you in this room will be targeted. I run the protection program" * Why "protection program" is the language of organized crime, not a coequal branch of government * Trump calling Democrats "ruthless Communists" who would "close your churches" and "kill your people," and labeling them "animals" * Why they reached for the word "communism" to describe ranked-choice voting, proportional representation, and rent freezes * How this is McCarthyism, structurally, not as a metaphor * Eight Americans sentenced to a combined 450 years over protests outside a Texas ICE detention center * Daniel Sanchez Estrada sentenced to 30 years for moving a box of political zines, though he was not even at the protest * Prosecutor Frank Gatto: "people with that kind of extremist beliefs need extra time in prison" * Judge Reed O'Connor said he intended to "send a message to anyone who shares a similar ideology" * In Syracuse, ICE agents entered a polling place to intimidate poll worker Paigelynne Gonyea over an Instagram post * They carried her biometric information and a form letter reading "YOU MAY BE IN VIOLATION OF FEDERAL LAW" * How protection flows up and punishment flows down, with communism used to justify all of it * Why the desperation is the tell, and why this fear exists because the resistance is working Mike Johnson is scared. The Republican Party is scared. They are pulling out "communism" to describe rent freezes because they cannot argue against those ideas on the merits. He is running a protection program because he knows what is in the files. The desperation is the tell. When the Speaker of the House has to invoke the specter of Soviet communism, he is not operating from strength. He is operating from fear. This commentary represents my personal opinions and analysis of matters of public concern, informed by publicly available information. Any references to individuals constitute opinion and commentary protected under the First Amendment.

28. juni 202623 min