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Dec. 7, 2025, 9:46 PM EST / Updated Dec. 7, 2025, 10:02 PM ESTBy Scott WongIn a high-profile interview, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., bashed President Donald Trump, accusing her onetime political ally-turned-foe of inciting death threats against her and her son and failing to live up to his campaign pledge to focus on improving the lives of Americans.“For an ‘America First’ president, the No. 1 focus should have been domestic policy, and it wasn’t. And so, of course, I was critical, because those were my campaign promises,” Greene said in an interview that aired Sunday on CBS News’ “60 Minutes.” “Once we fix everything here, then fine, we’ll talk to the rest of the world.”Later, CBS News’ Lesley Stahl asked Greene: “Are you MAGA?”“I am America First. … MAGA is President Trump’s phrase. That’s his political policies,” Greene said, referring to Trump’s signature motto, “Make America Great Again.” “I call myself America First.”Other Republicans, on and off Capitol Hill, have expressed frustration that Trump and the GOP aren’t doing enough to address Americans’ concerns about affordability. But in recent days, Trump has pointed to lower gas prices, and he issued an executive order directing his administration to investigate anti-competitive behavior that could affect food supply chains.“In a short time, President Trump has already delivered on many of the promises he was elected to enact. He’s secured the border; tackled Biden’s inflation crisis; lowered drug prices; ended taxes on tips, overtime, and social security; cooled inflation; deported criminal illegal aliens; implemented important reforms putting American workers first; and more,” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said in a statement Sunday night. “As the architect of the MAGA movement, President Trump will always put America First. Every single day he’s working hard to continue fulfilling the many promises he made and he will continue delivering,” she said.Greene spoke to “60 Minutes” on the heels of her shocking announcement last month that she will resign from office in January, a full year before her term ends. Her decision came after she broke with Trump and other party leaders and signed a bipartisan discharge petition that forced a successful vote in the House to compel the release of the government’s files on Jeffrey Epstein.Trump slammed Greene, a conservative hard-liner who at one point had been one of his most vocal defenders on Capitol Hill, as “Marjorie Traitor Greene.” When Greene complained that she was receiving death threats because of Trump, he dismissed her worries: “I don’t think her life is in danger. … I don’t think anybody cares about her.”In the “60 Minutes” interview, Greene said that as Trump was fighting the release of the Epstein files and calling her a traitor, he was taking meetings with controversial foreign leaders and New York’s mayor-elect, Zohran Mamdani.“He did this in the same time span where President Trump brought in the Al Qaeda leader that was wanted by the U.S. government, who is now the president of Syria. Then, within a week, he brought in the Crown Prince MBS, who murdered an American journalist,” Greene said referring to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. “And then he brought in the newly elected Democrat socialist mayor of New York. That was the time span that he called me a traitor.”When Stahl asked whether Trump had run her out of town, Greene replied: “No, not at all. … I will be no one’s battered wife … and I won’t allow the system to abuse me anymore.”Greene recounted a phone call in which Trump tried to persuade her to back off the discharge petition effort involving the Epstein files.“We did talk about the Epstein files, and he was extremely angry at me that I had signed the discharge petition to release the files,” she told Stahl. “I fully believe that those women deserve everything they’re asking. They’re asking for all of it to come out; they deserve it. And he was furious with me. … He said it was going to hurt people.”In the end, Greene and three other House Republicans didn’t cave under pressure from Trump. The Epstein bill got to the floor, and all but one House member voted for Trump’s Justice Department to release the files; the Senate passed the bill unanimously, and Trump quietly signed it into law.But because of Trump’s ire, Greene said, she and her son faced numerous death threats. She said she sent Trump messages she had received threatening her son’s life and described Trump’s response as “extremely unkind.” She elaborated about their exchange in a thread on X earlier Sunday, saying Trump “responded with harsh accusatory replies and zero sympathy.” “I also sent these threats to [FBI] Director Kash Patel and thankfully he responded with ‘on it’ and I sent these threats to Vice President JD Vance who responded promptly with kindness and sympathy,” Greene posted on X.In the “60 Minutes” interview, Greene rejected speculation that her very public break with Trump is because she wants to run for president in 2028.“I have zero plans, zero desire to run for president. I would hate the Senate. I’m not running for governor,” Greene said. “But, Lesley, it doesn’t matter how many times I say it, I’ll have face-to-face conversations with people, and I’ll flat-out tell them to their face, and they won’t believe me. “And they’re like, ‘Oh yeah, sure.’ Wink, wink. And I’m, like, I don’t know how to make it more clear.”Scott WongScott Wong is a senior congressional reporter for NBC News.

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In a high-profile interview, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., bashed President Donald Trump, accusing her one-time political ally-turned-foe of inciting death threats against her and her son and failing to live up to his campaign pledge of focusing on improving the lives of Americans.“For an ‘America First’ president, the No. 1 focus should have been domestic policy, and it wasn’t.



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Sept. 24, 2025, 12:52 AM EDTBy Phil Helsel, Angela Yang and Doha MadaniLOS ANGELES — Returning to the air to thunderous cheers and applause in his first episode since ABC suspended his late-night show, Jimmy Kimmel on Tuesday took direct aim at President Donald Trump while also trying to smooth tensions following his joke about the Republican reaction to the killing of Charlie Kirk.”You understand that it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man,” Kimmel said, his voice breaking, during his opening monologue. “I don’t think there’s anything funny about it.”Disney-owned ABC took “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” off the air last Wednesday after conservative fury over comments Kimmel made during a show monologue and after public criticism from the Trump-appointed chair of the Federal Communications Commission.A furious backlash to ABC’s decision followed, with prominent voices in and outside the entertainment industry saying it amounted to an attack on free speech by the administration.Kimmel said Tuesday that the Trump administration “tried to coerce the affiliates who run our show, in the cities that you live in, to take my show off the air.””That’s not legal. That’s not American, that is un-American, and it’s so dangerous,” he said.The events that led to Kimmel’s suspension began Sept. 15, five days after a gunman fatally shot Kirk, a popular activist on the right, as Kirk was at a public event at Utah Valley University in Orem.Kimmel’s comments came at a time when investigators had not released details about the suspect’s potential motives.Jimmy Kimmel on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” in Los Angeles on Tuesday.Randy Holmes / Disney“We hit some new lows over the weekend, with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said in the monologue.Tyler Robinson, 22, was charged the next day with Kirk’s murder. In charging documents, prosecutors released text messages in which, they said, Robinson said he targeted Kirk because he had “had enough of his hatred.”During his monologue Tuesday, Kimmel praised Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, for saying at a memorial Sunday that she has forgiven her husband’s killer.“She forgave him. That is an example we should follow,” Kimmel said, emotion in his voice. “If you believe in the teachings of Jesus, as I do, there it was. That, that’s it. A selfless act of grace. Forgiveness from a grieving widow.”“It touched me deeply, and I hope it touches many,” Kimmel said. “And if there’s anything we should take from this tragedy to carry forward, I hope it can be that.”Dandidi outside the taping of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” on Tuesday.Alex Welsh for NBC NewsOn Tuesday outside the El Capitan Entertainment Centre in Hollywood, where “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” is taped, ticket holders were eager to file in to be in the audience. Gabriela De Vries, who is from Germany, said she was shocked when the show got pulled off the air just as she had flown in to see Kimmel. Dressed head to toe in a star-spangled outfit and matching face paint, a man who goes by Dandidi applauded those who “pressured [Disney] by taking action — no thoughts and prayers, action — by canceling their Disney, putting that heat under them.”ABC suspended Kimmel’s show after FCC Chair Brendan Carr described his monologue jokes as “the sickest conduct possible” in an interview with conservative commentator Benny Johnson. Carr threatened regulatory action. Hours later, Nexstar Media Group said it would pre-empt Kimmel’s show for the “foreseeable future” on all its ABC-affiliated channels. Carr thanked Nexstar for “doing the right thing” on X and encouraged other local broadcasters to follow its lead. Sinclair, another broadcast ownership group, quickly followed Nexstar in saying it, too, would pre-empt Kimmel’s show on its 30 ABC-affiliated stations. The companies reiterated this week that they would continue to do so. Both companies have pending business before the FCC. Nexstar said last month it intends to put in a bid to buy another broadcast company, Tegna, which would most likely require the FCC to loosen its 39% cap on national television audience reach. Sinclair is exploring merger options for its broadcast business, according to CNBC.Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday wrote to the corporate heads of both Nexstar and Sinclair, asking how their decisions to pre-empt Kimmel’s show “may relate to regulatory issues pending with the Trump administration.”Guillermo Rodriguez and Jimmy Kimmel hug on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” on Tuesday.Randy Holmes / DisneyA spokesperson for ABC had initially said Kimmel’s show would be “pre-empted indefinitely,” sparking immediate backlash, with many decrying what they described as an infringement on his constitutional right to free speech and others calling for a boycott of the Disney-owned streaming services Hulu, Disney+ and ESPN. Comedian, actor and podcaster Marc Maron called on free speech advocates to speak out against pulling Kimmel’s show.”If you have any concern or belief in real freedom or the Constitution and free speech, this is it,” Maron said in a video on his Instagram account. “This is the deciding moment; this is what authoritarianism looks like in this country. It’s happening.”Hollywood rallies behind Kimmel, while Trump and supporters cheer suspension03:08Even some Republicans took issue with the matter. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said Friday on his podcast that while he thought what Kimmel said was wrong, what Carr was doing was “unbelievably dangerous.” Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., called Carr’s comments about Kimmel “absolutely inappropriate” in an interview on NBC News’ “Meet the Press” on Sunday.Carr later denied that he threatened the stations, saying Monday that he was referring to the FCC’s ability to review a license because of a “news distortion complaint.” He said Disney made its own “business decision” to pre-empt Kimmel’s show.”What I’ve been very clear in the context of the Kimmel episode is the FCC, and myself in particular, have expressed no view on the ultimate merits had something like that been filed, what our take would be one way or another,” Carr said.After days of mounting pressure, Disney said Monday that Kimmel would return to the air in a statement that did not address the freedom-of-speech concerns or the calls for a boycott.Kimmel said in Tuesday’s monologue that Trump has targeted his critics on late-night television to intimidate them and to bully corporations to remove them. “The president of the United States made it very clear he wants to see me and the hundreds of people who work here fired from our jobs. Our leader celebrates Americans losing their livelihoods because he can’t take a joke,” Kimmel said.“We have to speak out against this,” he said.Phil HelselPhil Helsel is a reporter for NBC News.Angela YangAngela Yang is a culture and trends reporter for NBC News.Doha MadaniDoha Madani is a senior breaking news reporter for NBC News. Pronouns: she/her.Rebecca Cohen contributed.
November 3, 2025
Nov. 3, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Erika EdwardsTaking melatonin for long periods of time could be a sign of underlying heart problems.Long-term use of the popular over-the-counter sleep aid has been linked to a higher risk of heart failure and early death in adults with insomnia, according to research released Monday.There’s no evidence that melatonin supplements themselves cause heart problems, the researchers said. But a need to take them on a regular basis to help with falling and staying asleep could be a signal that the body is experiencing cardiac issues.“Insomnia can increase blood pressure, stress hormones and inflammation,” said Dr. Ekenedilichukwu Nnadi, lead author of the new study and an internal medicine resident at SUNY Downstate/Kings County Primary Care in New York City.Nnadi and colleagues looked at five years of electronic health records from 130,828 adults, average age 56, finding that people who took melatonin regularly for at least a year were nearly twice as likely to develop heart failure compared to those who didn’t use the supplement, though the actual rates were relatively low: 4.6% of people in the melatonin group developed heart failure, compared to 2.7% among those who didn’t take melatonin.They were more than three times as likely to be hospitalized for the condition (19% versus 6.6%), and nearly twice as likely to die during the study period, compared to people who didn’t take melatonin regularly.It’s unclear, however, whether the data captured outcomes of all people in the U.S. who take melatonin long term. Researchers identified people as chronic users of melatonin based on medical records only — that is, if they’d been prescribed the supplement. In the U.S., the supplement is available over the counter and isn’t often reflected in medical records.“I caution people against drawing concrete conclusions based on this study alone,” said Dr. Nishant Shah, a preventive cardiologist at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, who wasn’t involved with the study. “But now that we have this observation, this is prime time to figure out whether there’s actually a direct association of harm with sleep agents. That would be practice-changing.”Nnadi’s research is scheduled to be presented in New Orleans at an upcoming meeting of the American Heart Association. It has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal.Heart failure occurs when the heart can’t pump enough oxygen-rich blood to the body’s organs for them to function properly. Nearly 7 million Americans have the condition, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.While the study found that long-term melatonin use was an indicator of potential heart problems — and not causing the problems itself — experts agreed more research is needed into the supplements’ possible side effects.“We have patients using all kinds of supplements without understanding the risks,” said Dr. Martha Gulati, a preventive cardiologist and the incoming director of the Davis Women’s Heart Center at Houston Methodist DeBakey Heart and Vascular Institute in Texas. “If there is harm from a supplement, it means the cost could be far more than simply expensive urine.” Gulati was not involved with the new study.Melatonin is a hormone made naturally by the body that helps regulate sleep and wake cycles. Synthetic versions, sold widely over the counter as dietary supplements, are marketed to help people fall asleep faster or overcome jet lag. Because supplements aren’t regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, doses and purity can vary widely among brands.Use of the supplement has increased in recent years. A 2022 Sleep Foundation survey found that up to 27% of U.S. adults take melatonin, as well as 4% of kids. The new study didn’t include children.People taking melatonin for sleep for more than a year should talk with their doctor, experts said.“People should be aware that it should not be taken chronically without a proper indication,” Marie-Pierre St-Onge, director of the Center of Excellence for Sleep & Circadian Research at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York, said in a press release. St-Onge was not involved with the new research.Erika EdwardsErika Edwards is a health and medical news writer and reporter for NBC News and “TODAY.”
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