Trump didn’t hold back. In a blistering closed-door speech, he shredded two of his White House successors in front of donors desperate for a midterm miracle.
One former president was branded “a great divider” and “terrible.”
Another got an even more brutal label: “worst president in history.” Then he hinted at shadowy “military triumphs” against Iran that can’t be shown on televi… Continues…
Behind the doors of the National Republican Congressional Committee dinner, Trump’s remarks were more than insults; they were a warning shot wrapped in
campaign rhetoric. Casting Republicans as the last line of defense for “every hardworking patriot,” he painted Obama as the president
who divided America and empowered Iran, while reserving his harshest words for Biden, whom he blamed for inflation, energy shocks, and global instability.
Yet beneath the applause and laughter, his words exposed a party caught between fear and opportunity. The GOP’s razor-thin House majority, the weight of history
against the president’s party in midterms, and a volatile world stage all hang in the balance. Trump’s dramatic claims about “decimating”
Iran and secret military victories fed the room’s adrenaline, but also underscored a deeper unease: that America’s future is being wagered on escalating rhetoric,
unresolved wars, and a nation still painfully divided.