Hope For America with Heather Delaney Reese

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

17 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Trump attacks CNN’s Kaitlan Collins in bizarre Oval Office tirade

Descripción

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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156 episodios

Portada del episodio 400 white supremacists marched through D.C. on July 4th and Trump said nothing

400 white supremacists marched through D.C. on July 4th and Trump said nothing

At 11:15 in the evening, after hours of delays caused by severe thunderstorms over Washington, D.C., the President of the United States finally stepped onto the stage. Standing behind bulletproof glass on the National Mall to celebrate America's 250th birthday, he placed July 4, 2026, alongside July 4, 1776, and declared, "This is bigger... I think in its own way, it's more beautiful." On the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, a document written in rejection of monarchy, he once again teased the possibility of a third term. Based on the events of 7-4-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump compared the 250th birthday celebration to the founding itself, calling them "Two big ones," and teased a third term * He told Bret Baier he would deliver the speech no matter what, comparing reading a teleprompter behind bulletproof glass to storming the beaches on D-Day * He said it while a 107-year-old D-Day veteran who commanded landing craft waited to stand beside him * Roughly 400 masked men marched through the capital carrying Confederate flags and chanting "Reclaim America" * They were Patriot Front, a white nationalist group founded after the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville * Their logo is modeled after the fasces, the symbol of Mussolini's National Fascist Party, and their manifesto calls democracy a failure * Leaked documents show more than 540 members across 49 states, with a recruitment goal timed to the 250th anniversary * The haunting Reuters photograph of a Black woman sitting alone on the Metro, surrounded by masked members * Why covering their faces reveals the cowardice of the movement, in contrast to founders who signed the Declaration with their real names * How these men are the product of years of rhetoric teaching Americans to fear one another * Trump's silence on the white supremacist march was his approval * The contradiction of warning that communism is "like a cancer" you have to "cut out fast" while casting fellow Americans as enemies * Trump misquoting the Declaration, citing Genesis instead, saying "a communist will never say that" * Who actually carried this country for 250 years: the enslaved, Native communities, Japanese American families, immigrants, workers, and the marginalized * Four former presidents releasing statements, with Bill Clinton calling it "socialism for the super-rich" * Timothy Snyder assembling dozens of voices to read the 20 lessons from "On Tyranny" as counterprogramming * Sarah Jessica Parker: "The lesson of America is not that freedom was given. It is that freedom was defended. Again and again" The golden age Trump is building is not for us. It is for his enablers, the men in masks, the people who want to concentrate power so completely that the rest of us never get a say again. The real golden ages of America have always been the ones we build together. The promise was never that it would be perfect. The promise was that it would keep trying. And we will never stop trying. 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.

6 de jul de 202619 min
Portada del episodio "We will send them into exile” - Trump's Mount Rushmore speech crossed into dangerous territory

"We will send them into exile” - Trump's Mount Rushmore speech crossed into dangerous territory

At 9:03 p.m. tonight, the 45th and 47th President of the United States took the stage beneath Mount Rushmore in Keystone, South Dakota, as the U.S. Air Force Academy Band played Hail to the Chief. As he began to speak, it became clear this was not a celebration of America's 250th birthday. It was the 2026 version of the Red Scare. Over the next thirty minutes, Donald Trump declared that the Democratic Party was made up of communists, promised that communists would be sent into exile, and outlined a plan he said would ensure Republicans "will not lose an election for a hundred years." Based on the events of 7-3-2026 The Breakdown: * The White House previewed the speech as "inspiring" and "optimistic," answering "What does it mean to be an American?" Instead, Trump delivered a declaration of political war against half the nation * Like every authoritarian movement, the speech began with belonging, defining who counted as a "real" American through God, culture, and bloodline * He named Britain, Athens, Jerusalem, and Rome as America's roots, while erasing Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Indigenous nations * The eugenics language of a "new breed of citizen," spoken on stolen Lakota land beneath a monument carved by a man with documented KKK ties * Erasing the women who built this country, from Abigail Adams to Harriet Tubman to Sojourner Truth * Trump calling communism a greater threat than World War I, World War II, Pearl Harbor, or 9/11 * The loyalty test: "You can be a communist or you can be a patriot. You cannot be both" * Standing on treaty-guaranteed Lakota land, calling it a "Marxist lie" to teach that we live on stolen land * The Oglala Sioux Tribe's formal resolution opposing the event * The most dangerous words: a promise to "send them into exile" on the eve of a nation founded by people who fled exile * His plan to "terminate the filibuster" and pass the SAVE America Act so Republicans "will not lose an election for a hundred years" * How this is McCarthyism resurrected, with far-right voices already calling to revive the 1954 Communist Control Act * The contrast: NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani, a naturalized citizen, delivering a more patriotic address hours earlier from behind George Washington's desk * Mamdani: "It is precisely because we love this nation that we will not leave it" * Why this speech was designed to convince followers that anyone who challenges Trump is an enemy of the country * Frederick Douglass's 1852 "What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?" and how he called the Constitution a "GLORIOUS LIBERTY DOCUMENT" * Why real patriotism means loving this country enough to tell the truth about its past This is not a celebration of America. This is the end of it if he succeeds. But the real America has always been an idea, shared and passed on by every generation willing to build it. This is our promise to America on her 250th birthday: we will not let those hungry for power convince us to hate one another. We will not surrender to the lie that our neighbors are the enemy. We will never stop fighting for the country America has always been capable of becoming. 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.

Ayer24 min
Portada del episodio Trump says his sons have "inside information" and he feels sorry for them

Trump says his sons have "inside information" and he feels sorry for them

In an interview that aired at 5:27 pm yesterday evening, the President of the United States struggled as he sat leaning forward in the Oval Office. As the questions turned to his family's business dealings and the billions of dollars his financial disclosures showed he had earned since taking back the presidency, his skin grew tackier with sweat the more he talked. When Kernen handed him what should have been the easiest opportunity to reassure Americans that his family keeps a clear line between public office and private profit, Trump did the opposite. He volunteered something about his own sons that no ethics lawyer would ever advise a president to say: "Almost anything they do... they have inside information." Based on the events of 7-2-2026 The Breakdown: * In a CNBC interview, Trump admitted his sons have "inside information" on "almost anything they do," while asking Americans to feel sorry for them * His financial disclosures showed more than two billion dollars in revenue in 2025 * He could not name the firms managing his money and was unsure what rules he was supposed to follow * U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro announced a felony indictment against 67-year-old Olympic canoeist David "Davey" Hearn for touching peeling paint at the Reflecting Pool * The charge carries a maximum of ten years. Pirro claimed he "forcefully and violently" removed the liner * Hearn says he stopped on a bike ride, touched a piece already peeling off, and was handcuffed and held for five hours * His attorneys Norm Eisen and Mary Dohrmann called it "the misuse of government power against an ordinary citizen based on a concocted narrative" * How the truth is that the administration rushed a vanity project, ignored experts, and hired the wrong company * A reporter asked how Pirro could charge Hearn while over 1,000 January 6 rioters were pardoned. She refused to answer: "Who's next? Not you!" * Even Republican Senator Thom Tillis: "What freakin' parallel universe did I wake up in?" * Air Force Major Jason Watson became the first active-duty commissioned officer in American history to publicly call for a president's impeachment, conviction, and removal * Watson recited his oath on the Capitol steps and listed the charges before being handcuffed while the crowd chanted "Who do you serve?" * The career, pension, and freedom Watson knowingly risked, and the legal defense fund that raised more than $93,000 in 24 hours * Jack Smith's first televised interview: "We are facing an attack on the rule of law that is different in kind and scope to anything I've seen in my lifetime" * Smith on the "retribution prosecutions" of James Comey and Letitia James, and the agents Kash Patel fired * Smith confirming he is still ready to bring the case to trial after Trump leaves office * Smith's advice to state attorneys general: "I would be ready to litigate everything. Don't let reason be a limitation" The oath exists for days like this one, when keeping it means risking a career, a reputation, or even freedom. In two days, America turns 250 years old, and that anniversary belongs to all of us. This has never been about left versus right. It is about those willing to defend our constitutional democracy and those willing to sacrifice it for power. The people who honored their oath this week have shown us the way forward. Now it is our turn. 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.

4 de jul de 202620 min
Portada del episodio Donald Trump's unhinged North Dakota speech showed a man in steep decline

Donald Trump's unhinged North Dakota speech showed a man in steep decline

At 3:13 in the afternoon, Donald Trump walked onto the stage in Medora, North Dakota, having arrived aboard the $400 million retrofitted Qatari jet that now serves as Air Force One. He was there for the dedication of the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library. But what most Americans will remember is watching a president whose mental struggles appear to be accelerating at an alarming pace. During the hour-long speech, he told the crowd he "had a conversation with Theodore Roosevelt," a man who died in 1919. Based on the events of 7-1-2026 The Breakdown: * Trump claimed he "had a conversation with Theodore Roosevelt," likely an AI chatbot in the museum, described as though it were real * Looking at Don Jr. and Eric, Trump mused about giving himself and his sons the Medal of Honor: "we'll have a threesome" * He admitted he has "seriously thought of giving myself the Congressional Medal of Honor" * When the teleprompters broke, he called the left one "a waste of time" and rated the right one "a two on the scale of 10," accidentally grading his own party * He pivoted from Roosevelt to the border, to threatening Spain, to Venezuela, to Iran, struggling to hold a single thought * He lied that the UFC fight was "broadcast on CBS" with "among the highest ratings," when it aired exclusively on Paramount+ * He closed the library dedication by singing along to "Y.M.C.A." * The rambling revealed not just confusion but conviction, and at times profound racism * Trump invoked "racehorse theory," a term rooted in the eugenics movement his father raised him on * How Theodore Roosevelt himself was a prominent proponent of eugenics, and the origin of the theory in animal breeding * On affirmative action, "looked a certain way" doing the work of saying race without saying it * Branding all political opposition as communist, calling it a bigger threat than the World Wars, Pearl Harbor, and 9/11 * What Roosevelt actually stood for: conservation, trust-busting, public lands for future generations, institutions serving the public * Roosevelt's own great-grandson opposing what Trump and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum are doing, calling him "the old lion" * The Center for Western Priorities: "Teddy Roosevelt ended the Gilded Age. Donald Trump and Doug Burgum are using their power to do the opposite" * How Roosevelt was a deeply complicated figure whose imperialism and racism deserve to be remembered too * Trump's imperial claims on Cuba, Spain, Venezuela, and Iran in a single speech * How Trump embraced Roosevelt's empire while discarding his stewardship Three days from now, this country turns 250 years old. I keep thinking about the people who built this country, the ones who were told they did not belong and stayed anyway, and what they would feel seeing the man who will speak on their behalf. But when Democrats take back Congress, every committee and investigation will have his own words as proof. The case is building itself every time he gives a speech. And when the reckoning comes, he will have written it himself. 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.

3 de jul de 202617 min
Portada del episodio Trump just revealed that he made over $2.2 Billion in 2025

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 de jul de 202623 min