A CNN segment featured a supercut of the growing opposition against Trump's "Make America Healthy Again" movement."We are on the brink of falling apart," a MAHAA CNN segment featured a supercut of the growing opposition against Trump's "Make America Healthy Again" movement."We are on the brink of falling apart," a MAHA

'Kicked a hornet's nest': CNN hits Trump with supercut of 'betrayed' die-hard MAHA fans

2026/05/01 08:45
5 min read
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A CNN segment featured a supercut of the growing opposition against Trump's "Make America Healthy Again" movement.

"We are on the brink of falling apart," a MAHA influencer is shown confessing in a report by CNN's Meena Duerson. "I am a diehard conservative, and I got this group of moms, and I'm trying to keep us together."

'Kicked a hornet's nest': CNN hits Trump with supercut of 'betrayed' die-hard MAHA fans

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recruited social media influencers to campaign for Trump's MAHA movement. Kennedy leveraged his past as a lawyer supporting people who sued the former owners of Roundup weed killer for using cancer-causing chemicals.

The segment explained that the Trump administration is siding with Bayer, the current maker of Roundup, in a Supreme Court case over whether lawsuits can be filed over harmful chemical exposure. Trump also signed an executive order protecting glyphosate, the chemical Kennedy claimed caused cancer.

Zen Honeycutt, the founder of Moms Across America, told CNN that the executive order left her feeling "disgusted. I was literally sick to my stomach."

"There were millions of Democratic and Independent moms in particular that voted Republican because they believed Trump, that he was going to do something about pesticides in the food," Honeycutt said.

Another influencer said that "MAHA is feeling betrayed and completely dissatisfied with what the administration has done."

"They kicked the hornet's nest," Vani Hart, an activist and blogger, told CNN. "And now, I think they're starting to realize it."

A group of Republicans sounded off to the Wall Street Journal on Thursday after a Trump administration official hinted that they are considering avoiding Congress on yet another issue.

Under the War Powers Act, the president must notify Congress of a military action within 48 hours and withdraw the troops within 60 days. However, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said during a recent hearing that the Trump administration believes the clock for both of those countdowns stopped on the day that the administration agreed to a ceasefire with the Iranian regime, the Journal reported.

"While Trump halted airstrikes against Iran, the U.S. military continues to enforce a military blockade that prohibits ships from reaching or leaving Iranian ports. A blockade is considered an act of war under international law," the report added.

Several Republicans criticize Hegseth's interpretation in interviews with the Journal.

“It stopped from the cease-fire? Which cease-fire? Does the cease-fire still count if they don’t cease firing?” Sen. Todd Young (R-IN) told the WSJ. “I don’t know. Is there any legal precedent to this? I mean, these are the sorts of questions members would ask.”

Sen. Josh Hawley echoed Young's argument that the administration needs to make a formal case to Congress.

Sen. John Curtis (R-UT) said he won't support spending additional funding on the war in Iran without Congressional approval.

"As we reach this 60-day mark, it is time for decision-making from both the administration and from Congress—and that can happen in league with one another, not in conflict,” Curtis said.

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Fans of President Donald Trump's MAGA movement freaked out on Thursday after a high-profile progressive influencer posted a rage-bait photo on social media.

Hasan Piker, a podcaster who has hosted multiple Democrats on recent episodes, posted two photos on X of him riding a train while reading "What is to be Done?" by Russian communist leader Vladimir Lenin. While the book was enough to send some MAGA fans into a tailspin, some noticed another detail that really set off the firestorm — Piker was wearing an expensive piece from Cartier.

MAGA fans shared their reactions on social media.

"Can't make it up - reading Lenin, $4,000 Cartier ring on his hand, I cannot," Alexis Wilkins, country singer and girlfriend of FBI Director Kash Patel, posted on X.

"Lenin wanted to overthrow the tsar and create a new communist man, while today’s democratic socialists want 'high-speed rail' from Bakersfield to Sacramento and free cross-sex hormones for 'trans kids,'" Chris Rufo, a conservative provocateur, posted on X. "It’s a fundamentally childish ideology, only capable of empty simulation."

"Incredible. Even most e-girls aren’t this self-absorbed," conservative writer Patrick Casey posted on X.

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With the sudden exit of Gov. Janet Mills from the Democratic Senate primary in Maine, criticism has begun to pile up around Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), who played an essential role in coaxing Mills into the race to begin with.

But Schumer's allies are laying the blame squarely at the feet of Mills herself, for running a lackluster campaign, reported Stephen Neukam of NOTUS, who shared what he called the "spicy fallout."

"The Schumer allies pointed to Mills' delayed campaign launch, and said her polling was so poor that it was no guarantee that an intervention from Democratic leadership would have saved her," reported Neukam. "More aggressive action from Schumer, the sources said, would have been politically controversial. Insiders describe a campaign that failed to really launch, and in the end met dire financial straits."

Mills, who gained national notoriety after she publicly stood up to Trump for threatening funding to her state, specifically cited a lack of funds as her reason for suspending the campaign.

"A Democratic operative with ties to the race told us that Mills 'needed significant money' but 'didn’t have it,'" wrote Neukam. As for why Schumer or the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee didn't intervene to help fund Mills through the primary, the operative said, “You need to show life if you want a life boat.”

With Mills out of the race, the presumptive Democratic nominee to challenge longtime Republican Sen. Susan Collins is Graham Platner, a harbormaster and oyster farmer who is running as a progressive political outsider and was already beating Mills in most primary polls. Democratic leaders who may have been skeptical of his campaign are now falling in line behind him.

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