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‘Something is off here,’ reporter reveals the ‘disgust’ for Trump within his own campaign

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‘Something is off here,’ reporter reveals the ‘disgust’ for Trump within his own campaign
  • UP NEXT

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  • ‘Don’t sleep on Texas’: How a late-in-the-game abortion story could change the election

    04:42

  • Paul Rudd hands out water to voters in Pennsylvania

    02:32

  • UP NEXT

    Reproductive rights advocate: ‘We cannot lose the community we built through this’

    04:06

  • ‘Oligarchy vibes’: Elon Musk joins Trump’s call with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy

    07:53

  • Nicolle Wallace: ‘Putin is likely sitting in the Kremlin with a big fat smile’

    04:00

  • Jacob Soboroff: ‘Mass deportation IS family separation’

    10:22

  • Democracy defender under Duterte: ‘It was shocking to see this all over again and to see it work’

    05:42

  • Andrew Weissmann on second-term Trump DOJ: ‘You won’t have the people who will simply refuse’

    10:05

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Politics

Right-wing Muslim activist resigns from Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission

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President Donald Trump’s so-called Religious Liberty Commission, which is filled with right-wing zealotsappears to be coming apart at the seams.

Last week’s resignation of Sameerah Munshi, formerly the only Muslim woman selected as one of the commission’s advisers, underscores the religious divisions that are causing disarray for the panel and the conservative movement more broadly.

Munshi is a conservative activist who has advocated for allowing parents to opt out of lesson plans related to LGBTQ+ issues, a stance the White House has praised for its rejection of “radical gender ideology.” She said her resignation was due to two things: the commission’s expulsion of conservative activist Carrie Prejean Boller and the Trump administration’s war with Iran.

I recently wrote about how Boller’s removal, which followed a heated argument at a commission hearing over antisemitism, has fueled allegations of anti-Catholicism within the MAGA movement. Boller recently appeared on an episode of Tucker Carlson’s podcast for a chummy chat about her removal. And Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., requested last week that the House Oversight and Judiciary committees review her ouster.

In addition to that, Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission is being sued over its lack of diversity. (The White House has said the panel is intended to reflect a “diversity of faith traditions, professional backgrounds and viewpoints.”)

So Munshi’s resignation is just the latest negative publicity for the commission.

“I resign in protest of two deeply troubling developments: the official removal of Carrie Prejean Boller for her deeply held beliefs about Palestine and the federal government’s illegal war against Iran, undertaken without clear constitutional or congressional authorization,” Munshi wrote on Substack.

“Ultimately, I will have to stand before God and answer to Him for my role in this commission,” she added. “I ask His forgiveness if I have legitimized their evil or the evil of this administration in any way. I ask Him to keep my intentions pure and to guide me toward paths that bring true benefit to my community.”

Boller’s removal has also helped fuel right-wing antipathy toward the Rev. Paula White, who Boller has said was behind a “witch hunt” that led to her ouster. During their conversation, Boller and Carlson took turns bashing White, a controversial preacher of the prosperity gospel who has served as religious adviser to Trump.

Some evangelicals in the MAGA movement were apoplectic when White was chosen to lead the White House Faith Office. And now it appears the chickens have come home to roost as her involvement with Trump’s White House threatens the MAGA movement’s religious coalition.

Ja’han Jones is an MS NOW opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog.

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Jesse Jackson’s family grapples with Illinois Senate endorsement controversy

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Jesse Jackson’s family grapples with Illinois Senate endorsement controversy

Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton had touted an endorsement from Jackson, who died in February…
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Johnson on Trump’s Hormuz plan

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Speaker Mike Johnson said he supports President Donald Trump’s effort to build a global coalition ensure safe passage of commerce through the Strait of Hormuz — even if Trump “didn’t anticipate it” being necessary before launching airstrikes against Iran. Speaking to reporters after attending a Washington event with Trump…
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