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Trump’s Pathetic McDonald’s Stunt Backfires Spectacularly

Donald Trump’s entire “work at McDonalds” shtick was a staged photo-op—and his refusal to answer one major question is grabbing headlines.

Donald Trump wearing a McDonald’s apron and holding two brown McDonald’s paper bags. Two McDonald’s employees stand nearby.
Doug Mills/Pool/Getty Images

After manning the fry station at a McDonald’s restaurant on Sunday, Donald Trump didn’t answer a point-blank question about whether he would raise the minimum wage.

Trump took off his suit jacket, put on an apron, and watched an employee show him how to put the fries in oil, salt them, and then scoop them into boxes. Later, he took questions from reporters from the drive-through window. CBS’s Olivia Rinaldi asked the former president if “the minimum wage should be raised.”

“Well, I think this: I think these people work hard, they’re great, and I just saw something, a process that’s beautiful. It’s a beautiful thing to see, these are great franchises and produce a lot of jobs, and it’s great, and great people working here too,” Trump replied, avoiding the topic altogether.

Trump has obsessed over the fact that Kamala Harris worked at a McDonald’s while she was a student at Howard University, repeatedly claiming that it’s not true despite providing no evidence for his claim. Harris has often spoken of her time working at the restaurant, even telling the story in a campaign ad.

Harris’s proposed policies call for raising the federal minimum wage, which has been stuck at $7.25 an hour since 2009 due to opposition from Republicans and moderate Democrats. While Trump was president, he didn’t raise or even propose increasing the minimum wage, and was skeptical of how it would help Americans during his 2020 campaign. Trump’s McDonald’s stunt is part of a pattern of appearing to sympathize with working people while enacting policies that benefit the wealthy at workers’ expense.

Trump: Biden is Too Tough on Netanyahu

The Republican presidential candidate ridiculously claimed that Biden is “trying to hold” Bibi back, as the Israeli prime minister continued to ruthlessly bomb Lebanon and Gaza.

Donald Trump holds up a fist as he walks with Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House
SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images
Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu in 2020

Donald Trump thinks that President Biden is trying to restrict Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The former president said as much during an interview on an airport tarmac after landing in Detroit Friday ahead of a campaign roundtable in the suburb of Auburn Hills, telling reporters that he was about to speak to Netanyahu following Israel’s assassination of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar Thursday.

“He’s doing a good job,” Trump said about the Israeli leader. “Biden is trying to hold him back, just so you understand, Biden is more superior to the V.P. He’s trying to hold him back, and he probably should be doing the opposite, actually. I’m glad that [Netanyahu] decided to do what he had to do, but it’s moving along pretty good.”

Trump characterizing Biden as trying to “hold Netanyahu back” is absurd when the White House privately gave Israel the green light to expand its bombing campaign from Gaza to Lebanon while publicly urging a cease-fire. The idea that Netanyahu is doing a good job when the civilian death toll continues to rise in both Gaza and Lebanon raises the question of how Trump defines a “good job” too—and what he would support if he returns to the White House.

On Thursday, Kamala Harris said that Sinwar’s death represents “an opportunity to finally end the war in Gaza,” adding that a cease-fire was only possible when “Israel is secure, the hostages are released, the suffering in Gaza ends, and the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity, security, freedom and self-determination.”

While this essentially repeats what the White House has been saying throughout Israel’s war, it’s quite different from Trump’s bombastic rhetoric: He has repeatedly said that Israel has to “finish the job.” The former president’s Friday comments appear to be an attempt to paint Biden, and by extension, Harris, as being less supportive of Israel than him, which flies in the face of America’s backing of Israel over the past year. The question is whether the conflict will cost either candidate critical votes in a few weeks.

Donald Trump Doesn’t Think Gutfeld! Is Funny Either

The Republican presidential candidate reportedly rejected a bunch of joke submissions from one of the Fox News “comedy” show’s contributors.

Greg Gutfeld leans back in a chair and laughs hysterically to something that is probably not funny
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images
Greg Gutfeld

Donald Trump was eager to throw his ghostwriters under the bus during an interview with Fox & Friends on Friday.

After Steve Doocy asked the Republican presidential candidate who helped him craft his mean-spirited jokes for Thursday night’s Al Smith charity dinner, Trump took to complaining about his joke writers. “I had a lot of people, a couple people from Fox actually, I shouldn’t say that. But they wrote some jokes. For the most part I didn’t like any of them,” said Trump to the Fox team.

But a network spokesperson was quick to fact-check Trump and clarified “FOX News confirmed that no employee or freelancer wrote the jokes” for the former president’s tight 10.

It appears that some of Trump’s jokes may have come from comedian Nick Di Paolo, who is not an employee or contract freelancer for the Fox News network but is a contributor to Greg Gutfeld’s late-night show. Di Paolo was fired from a previous gig for joking about school shooters.

Perhaps it shouldn’t be a surprise that Trump wanted to get a dig in at Fox while appearing on the network, considering his on-again-off-again relationship with Fox’s billionaire owner, Rupert Murdoch. During his Friday appearance, he criticized Fox News for airing any negative political ads against him.

“I’m going to see Rupert Murdoch,” said Trump. “I don’t know if he’s thrilled that I say it … and I’m going to tell him something very simple.… Don’t put on negative commercials for 21 days, and don’t put on … they’re horrible people that come on and lie. I’m going to say, ‘Rupert, please do it this way.’”

Additionally, Trump may be acting out against Fox News due to jealousy: The ratings for Kamala Harris’s Fox News interview boasted more than double the viewers of his appearance on the network.

Watch Kamala Harris Roast Old Man Trump

“If you are exhausted on the campaign trail, it raises real questions about whether you are fit for the toughest job in the world.”

Donald Trump speaks in the sun with makeup streaked across his face.
Win McNamee/Getty Images
Donald Trump on Friday October 18

Kamala Harris called out Donald Trump Friday for canceling interviews and public appearances, saying that Trump may not have the stamina for another term as president. 

Speaking at a rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, Harris referenced recent reports from Trump’s campaign that the former president is exhausted, reminding the crowd that Trump also pulled out of a second debate with her. 

“He is ducking debates and canceling interviews. Come on,” Harris said, smiling as the audience booed. 

“And check this out: His own campaign team recently said it is because of exhaustion. Well, if you are exhausted on the campaign trail, it raises real questions about whether you are fit for the toughest job in the world,” Harris added as the partisan crowd cheered.

When he was president, Trump often faced criticism for skipping important functions, such as a 2018 visit to a World War I cemetery in France with other allies. But he was still campaigning vigorously then—something that isn’t the case now. 

Later on Friday, Trump fired back at Harris, accusing her of ducking events. 

“She should have been last night with the Catholics,” Trump said, referencing the Al Smith dinner, a bipartisan charity event in New York Thursday night that Harris didn’t attend. 

“So all they do is put out sound bites. Tell me when you’ve seen me take even a little bit of a rest. I’m not even tired, I’m really exhilarated. You know why? We’re killing her in the polls, because the American people don’t want her,” Trump added. “She didn’t pass her bar exam. She’s not a smart person. She’s not a person that should represent our country.”

Many of the interviews that Trump has pulled out of are those where he would face tougher, unbiased interviewers, such as CBS’s 60 Minutes, CNBC’s Squawk Box, and NBC News. In contrast, the Al Smith dinner is a lighthearted event where the speakers usually make jokes, and Trump used his speech to make a bitter, profanity-laden rant against his political opponents in a room full of Catholic priests. 

With the election only weeks away, every action from Trump and Harris is being closely scrutinized by voters and media outlets. Pulling back on public appearances, media interviews, and another presidential debate would bring any candidate negative attention, let alone the oldest candidate in history, who refuses to release his medical records.  

New Abortion Pill Suit Wants to Force More Teenagers to Get Pregnant

Three states are once again suing to limit access to mifepristone.

Hands with silver rings and black nail polish hold a small box that reads "Mifepritone Tablet 200 mg"
Shuran Huang/The Washington Post/Getty Images

A cohort of states with some of the most draconian abortion restrictions in the nation are suing the federal government to limit access to mifepristone, one of the pills used to induce an abortion—but an underlying reason behind the suit is perhaps one of the most insidious anti-abortion initiatives yet.

Mifepristone, combined with misoprostol, composes the two-step prescription referred to as “the abortion pill.” The procedure accounts for more than half of all abortions in the United States, according to a 2022 report by the Guttmacher Institute, and has become a crucial tool as abortion restrictions limit access to in-person medical visits.

The suit was filed by the attorneys general of Kansas, Missouri, and Idaho, who argued that the medication should be illegal for minors entirely (misoprostol is fully legal as it is used for other treatments). The suit also accuses the Food and Drug Administration of having “unlawfully removed its prohibition against mailing abortion drugs,” allowing what the attorneys general describe as “a 50-state abortion drug mailing economy” to undermine their states’ abortion laws.

But their moral ground for pushing the ban was seemingly less focused on protecting children’s health than it was on actually creating more children, with the suit detailing the (apparently) unfortunate ramifications that abortion access has on an (apparently) desirable conundrum: teenage pregnancy.

“This study thus suggests that remote dispensing of abortion drugs by mail, common carrier, and interactive computer service is depressing expected birth rates for teenaged mothers in Plaintiff States, even if other overall birth rates may have been lower than otherwise was projected,” the suit reads on page 190.

And that could lead to cataclysmic losses for the Republican states, whose legal counselors quietly noted that a diminished population could cost them as much as a seat in Congress.

“A loss of potential population causes further injuries as well: the States subsequent ‘diminishment of political representation’ and ‘loss of federal funds,’ such as potentially ‘losing a seat in Congress or qualifying for less federal funding if their populations are’ reduced or their increase diminished,” the suit continued.

The Supreme Court unexpectedly saved mifepristone access in June, when it unanimously ruled that a group of different plaintiffs, represented by the right-wing Christian legal group Alliance Defending Freedom, did not have legal standing to sue the FDA and that the legal organization had failed to demonstrate how its clients were personally harmed by the drug’s existence on the market.

By and large, most Americans support abortion access. In a 2023 Gallup poll, just 13 percent of surveyed Americans said that abortion should be illegal in all circumstances. Meanwhile, 34 percent said it should be legal under any circumstances, and an additional 13 percent said it should be legal in most circumstances.