President Donald Trump's MAGA supporters have started to turn on him, using his affinity for conspiracy theories to flip the script, a columnist reported on FridayPresident Donald Trump's MAGA supporters have started to turn on him, using his affinity for conspiracy theories to flip the script, a columnist reported on Friday

Trump's own MAGA supporters now target him with wild conspiracy theories: columnist

2026/04/24 23:13
11 min read
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President Donald Trump's MAGA supporters have started to turn on him, using his affinity for conspiracy theories to flip the script, a columnist reported on Friday.

Matt Lewis, an opinion contributor for The Hill, revealed how Trump's long-time use of 'extreme conclusions,' including his firm belief that the 2020 election was stolen, his claims that former President Barack Obama was not born in America (although Obama was born in Hawaii), and his belief that Haitian immigrants living in Ohio were eating cats and dogs, was haunting him.

Trump's own MAGA supporters now target him with wild conspiracy theories: columnist

"Regardless, we have entered a new and possibly ironic phase of the timeline: Trump is finally discovering what it’s like to be on the losing end of a conspiracy theory," Lewis wrote.

Now MAGA has started to unleash its own conspiracy theories targeted at the commander in chief as "the conspiratorial thinking about Trump has metastasized."

Not only has MAGA started to circulate the belief that Trump staged his own assassination attempt, some think he could be under "demonic possession," Lewis explained. Even Trump's recent photo op at the White House with "Doordash grandma" to talk about his "no tax on tips" policy has led to questions and theories that she could be a "paid actor" or "crisis actor" after it was discovered she had previously testified before Congress to support that policy.

"Taken together, these examples make it pretty clear that MAGA influencers haven’t stopped their conspiracy-theorism," Lewis wrote. "They have just finally migrated toward one of the most suspicious-looking supervillains in the nation — namely, Trump himself."

"It would be easy to lament all of this as evidence that Americans have lost trust in institutions and a common reality. And yes, that is a huge problem," Lewis wrote. "But it is also difficult to ignore the cosmic irony: Trump spent years encouraging the very style of thinking that now has people claiming he is the Antichrist who faked his own assassination attempt."

President Donald Trump likes to boast that he's created a historic economy, but new polling shows he may be on the wrong side of history.

The 79-year-old president was re-elected to a second term in 2024 largely on the basis of his economic message, but CNN's Harry Enten presented polling data that shows Americans have not liked seeing those policies in action.

"The president is making history on the economy, at least how Americans feel about it, and the completely wrong way," Enten said. "What are we talking about here? Well, let's take a look at Trump's net approval rating on the economy. Look at where he is today: Way, way down there, minus-32 points, and the net approval rating at the beginning of term two. Remember, Trump got a term two because voters trusted him more on the economy than Kamala Harris. He was at plus-six – that's a nearly 40-point drop and a little bit more than a year's time, and look at where he was at term one at this point. He was at plus-two points."

"Remember, the economy was a strength for him in term one at this point. It was a strength for him throughout his entire term one, but in term number two, it has become absolutely an anchor that is dragging him down to a historic degree," he added.

Trump has hit a historic low for economic approval, and Enten sees evidence that could get even worse.

"I'm a student of history – I like reading those history books, I like going through the spreadsheets, and just take a look here," Enten said. "He's not just the lowest at this point at any point in either of his presidencies, but he is at the lowest, he has the worst net approval rating at this point in any term for any president. Look at this: He's at minus-32 points now. Joe Biden, of course, Donald Trump loved to rip Joe Biden in the economy. Joe Biden, though, was at minus-25, seven points better. How about George W. Bush minus-25 points, again, seven points better than Donald Trump, and of course, Donald Trump loves to rip on James Earl Carter, but James Earl Carter, Jimmy Carter, was at minus-22 points, 10 points better than Donald Trump is right now. So again, Donald Trump making the type of history that no president likes to make."

"If you think this minus-32 points is bad, you ain't seen nothing yet, because just take a look at independents," Enten added. "Oh my, oh my ... look at this: Trump's economic net approval rating among independents, he's at minus-55 points. Ladies and gentlemen minus-55 points, 55 points underwater. Look at that. He was a plus one, he was a plus one in January of 2025. That's a 56-point drop, and in term number one he was breaking even at zero, so he's 55 points lower. The bottom line is the reason why the general electorate is leaving. Donald Trump is being driven, the car is being totally driven by independents absolutely abandoning him. He is down there with the Titanic at this point."

There's not really a precedent for the drop-off in support that Trump has experienced, Enten said.

"This this is the type of stuff where you're reading the history books, when you're looking back, and go, 'Whoa, that could never happen again,'" Enten said, "and that is the type of thing that absolutely ruins presidents."

"Take a look at the Kalshi prediction market chances," he added. "April CPI year-over-year is above March's 3.3 percent, 98 percent chance. That's not 100, but it's pretty gosh-darn close. The bottom line is this the economy for Donald Trump is his Waterloo."

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is looking to eliminate funding in fiscal 2027 for the agency that serves as the primary federal funding source for libraries and museums nationwide.

But congressional appropriators — who rebuffed similar efforts to gut the agency in fiscal 2026 — expressed little enthusiasm for the proposed cut in interviews with States Newsroom. Groups representing museums and libraries across the country also blasted the president’s proposal.

The administration is requesting $6 million in fiscal 2027 for the agency, known as the Institute of Museum and Library Services, “for necessary expenses to carry out (its) closure.”

U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, chair of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies, noted that her panel did not agree to the same Trump request in fiscal 2026 to eliminate funding for the agency.

“I personally have always been a fan of libraries, and it does a lot for local communities,” said Capito, a West Virginia Republican whose panel writes the annual bill to fund the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

“So, that’s what he does, he proposes, and then we look at it and make our own decisions,” she said.

Last year’s request turned down

The spending package signed into law by Trump in February provides roughly $292 million for the agency this fiscal year — a sharp rejection of Trump’s efforts.

Capito said that though her committee will consider the president’s fiscal 2027 request, “if you look at what we did last year, it shows that we kind of rejected that premise.”

Rep. Robert Aderholt, an Alabama Republican and chair of the corresponding Appropriations subcommittee in the House, appeared noncommittal about pursuing Trump’s fiscal 2027 request to gut the agency.

In response to States Newsroom’s request for a phone interview, Aderholt provided a written statement.

“We are reviewing the request from the Administration and the requests from every member of the House,” Aderholt said, adding that “this is a member-driven process, and we look forward to working with our colleagues in putting together a strong bill for the American taxpayers.”

Legal battles

The agency was created by Congress in 1996 and has a mission to “advance, support, and empower America’s museums, libraries, and related organizations through grantmaking, research, and policy development.”

The administration has taken major steps to try to dismantle the agency, including through a March 2025 executive order.

However, Trump’s Department of Justice reached a settlement earlier in April with the American Library Association — the nation’s largest library association — and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees — the country’s largest union of cultural workers — that protects the agency and guarantees it will continue issuing grants and program operations.

In another setback for the administration, the DOJ dropped its appeal this month in a case brought by 21 attorneys general, who challenged the administration’s efforts to dismantle the agency and had secured a major court victory in November.

‘The barbarians are at the door’

Meanwhile, leading Democrats on the House and Senate appropriations panels dealing with the agency’s spending were quick to lambaste Trump’s proposal in interviews with States Newsroom.

Sen. Tammy Baldwin, ranking member of the Senate subcommittee and a Wisconsin Democrat, described the agency as “such an incredibly valuable entity” and vowed to fight “tooth and nail” to protect it.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro, ranking member of the full House Appropriations Committee and the spending subcommittee with jurisdiction over the agency, said the administration’s request is “just neanderthal.”

The Connecticut Democrat said “we’ll work to restore like we try to do every time,” while adding that Trump’s request indicates that “the barbarians are at the door.”

Library, museum organizations push back

Leading library and museum organizations fiercely opposed Trump’s request and called on Congress to reject the proposal.

In a statement, Sam Helmick, president of the American Library Association, said Trump’s “continued attack” on the agency in the budget request and the March 2025 executive order to shutter it “shows the extent to which the administration is tone deaf to the needs of millions of Americans who rely on libraries every day: older adults and veterans who use library telehealth spaces; unemployed people who use library resources to find a new job or learn new skills; families who count on story time; and students and faculty who do research in school and academic libraries.”

John Chrastka, founder and executive director of EveryLibrary, said Trump’s proposal is “a direct threat to the infrastructure that millions of Americans rely on every day,” in a statement.

Chrastka, whose organization is dedicated to building support for libraries, said “libraries are not optional,” but instead represent “essential public resources that support literacy, workforce development, and community connection in every state.”

The American Alliance of Museums blasted the proposal as “misguided and out of step with the American public and Congress,” noting that similar efforts in fiscal 2026 and prior budget cycles to yank funding for the agency were rejected due to “strong bipartisan, bicameral support in Congress and sustained advocacy from the museum community.”

The Institute of Museum and Library Services declined to comment on Trump’s fiscal 2027 budget request.

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After being alerted to the fact that Donald Trump was up well after 2AM posting on Truth Social, only to resume once again five hours later on Friday morning, a lifelong friend from his Manhattan days claimed he was worried about the president’s health and stability.

On MS NOW’s “Morning Joe,” co-host Jonathan Lemire pointed to liberal influencer Harry Sisson who has been documenting the president's late-night social media postings, which have increasingly been going later and later at night, indicating the 79-year-old is not sleeping much.

Speaking with the Rev. Al Sharpton, who has maintained a relationship with Trump dating back decades as contemporaries in New York City society, Lemire noted, “Now, Trump's already posted twice more this morning after the sun came up. Mind you, those came less than five hours after his final overnight Truth. So the president’s not working on much sleep this morning.”

“Talk to us about this. This is someone you've known for a long time. What is this reflective of the president's state of mind?” the Morning Joe co-host prompted his guest.

“I think that we should be concerned about his state of mind,” Sharpton admitted. “First of all, for a 79-year-old man to be up at 3:00 in the morning and back up again five hours later, in and of itself is something that we should think about.”

He added, “And but the fact that he's all over the place calling for prosecutions of Clintons and calling for this, that and the other, it's unstable. So I don't care how well his chief of staff [Susie Wiles] is containing the White House, which is better than the first term; they're not containing him. And the problem is, what do you do if you're working in a White House that in the middle of the night –– the president can flip everything.”

- YouTube youtu.be

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