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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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Nov. 3, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Matt Dixon, Jonathan Allen and Henry J. GomezFor Hannah Szretter, the government shutdown is more than just a political fight.The 26-year-old Buffalo-area resident said she has had Type 1 diabetes since she was 10 and also now has a mental health disorder that prevents her from working. The $300 she receives each month in food assistance from the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program has been a needed lifeline to make sure she is able to maintain her blood sugar level.“I need these benefits for my food. If I don’t get the food, I won’t be able to control my numbers,” she told NBC News. “If you don’t get it taken care of, you can lose toes or limbs, or could go blind.”Now she is among the more than 40 million people who may not receive their November SNAP benefits as the government shutdown goes into its sixth week with no end in sight.“It’s scary,” she said.Along with the loss of SNAP benefits and the disruption of other social service programs for millions of people, the government shutdown has resulted in federal employees going without pay. Many of them have turned to food banks and unemployment benefits to get by.The shutdown is compounding problems that have intensified broader anxiety over an economy that in recent months has been marked by lingering high prices for many consumer goods, rough jobs numbers, mass layoffs at major companies — including Amazon and Target — and an uptick in inflation.That stagnation has in recent months eroded the high approval marks President Donald Trump once enjoyed on the economy.The bleak picture has some Republicans sounding the alarm to the White House — even though delivering the news isn’t easy.“No one wants to tell the president he’s losing on the economy,” said a Republican strategist who said they recently warned the White House about their concerns.Trump’s overall approval rating sits at 43%, while just 34% of registered voters say he has “lived up” to expectations on the economy, 33% say he has “looked out for the middle class” and 30% say he met expectations on inflation, according to a new NBC News poll released Sunday.Steve Kornacki: Most voters blame Republicans for shutdown in new NBC News poll04:24A White House official blamed Democrats for the prolonged shutdown and argued that some indicators, like growing wages and a booming stock market, are proof the economy has bright spots. The person also argued that the massive tax cuts and tariffs pursued by Trump are going to take time to fully take effect.“I don’t think anyone is under any illusions that things are perfect … but looking at the data, we feel good about the trajectory here,” said the White House official, who, like others in this article, was granted anonymity to speak candidly.“The bottom line is that the actual buying power and actual purchasing power of American consumers is going up, and, as far as specific prices go, you know there are things like gas and eggs that have gone down,” the official said. They also asserted that Trump’s pursuit of investment in the U.S. will pay major dividends in the future for American workers and consumers.Sen. Bernie Moreno, an Ohio Republican and Trump ally, said in an interview with NBC News that he remains optimistic about the economy.“The state of the economy is very strong, if you look at real wages that continue to go up,” Moreno said. “The Working Families Tax Cut Act worked really well. … The big thing is, obviously, the Democrats don’t want the economy to be successful, which is decently sad considering they should be cheering for the American people. But they shut down the government because they want Trump to fail.”Republicans are pushing for the passage of a “continuing resolution,” which would extend current funding levels until Nov. 21. Democrats, meanwhile, want to include an extension of tax credits that help people buy private insurance through the Affordable Care Act. Those credits expire at the end of the year, and without the extension, millions of people who receive them are likely to see steep premium increases. Republicans have argued the health care fight should be handled separately, after the government reopens.For his part, Trump for weeks has largely been focused on issues aside from the shutdown and economic concerns, with the exception of deals around his tariffs. Democrats have called on him to become more engaged to help end the stalemate.On Tuesday night, Trump did write on social media that Senate Republicans should use the “nuclear option” to get rid of the filibuster. The drastic move would allow Republicans to reopen the government without needing 60 votes — and the cooperation of Democrats — but it was swiftly rejected by Republican leaders.window.addEventListener(“message”,function(a){if(void 0!==a.data[“datawrapper-height”]){var e=document.querySelectorAll(“iframe”);for(var t in a.data[“datawrapper-height”])for(var r,i=0;r=e[i];i++)if(r.contentWindow===a.source){var d=a.data[“datawrapper-height”][t]+”px”;r.style.height=d}}});Last week, Trump’s attention was in Asia, far from the pain of the shutdown, with a big announcement on tariffs. Before that, much of his focus was on demolishing the East Wing of the White House to build a $300 million ballroom funded by private donors, a project that is ongoing.And on Thursday, a reporter asked Vice President JD Vance about the loss of SNAP benefits, and whether the administration was working to find a funding solution, as it has tried to do to pay troops and law enforcement during the shutdown.Vance avoided answering whether there would be a push around SNAP, instead blaming Democrats.“The unfortunate reality — and we’re starting to see this with our aviation industry — we’re going to find out the hard way with SNAP benefits, the American people are already suffering, and the suffering is going to get a lot worse,” Vance said.Some relief could be coming — but if it does, it’s over the Trump administration’s objections. On Friday, a federal judge ordered the administration to distribute money to SNAP recipients “as soon as possible” by tapping a contingency fund. Another federal judge in a separate case also said it was unlawful for the administration not to pay out the benefits.The White House has argued that it cannot use those funds and is seeking further clarification from the courts.Hassett: ‘If SNAP benefits run dry, it’s because they haven’t been funded by the Democrats’09:00Hannah’s mom, Betty, a 63-year-old recent retiree who is a caretaker for her daughter and a longtime Trump supporter, said she is losing confidence in the president she once supported amid the shutdown fight.“I think deep down he wants to help the country with things like food insecurity,” she said. “But now he is busy out of the country and demolishing the White House. I know that is being paid for with private funds, but those could be used to help people.”“It all seems very selfish,” she added.Betty Szretter said she now regrets voting for Trump in 2024 and would prefer a Democrat in the White House to “protect benefits he [Trump] wants to cut.”Several recent public polls have pointed to Trump having an economic problem, one that is quickly turning into a political one for Republicans trying to maintain slim majorities in the House and Senate headed into the 2026 midterms — an election where Republicans will have to energize Trump voters without his presence on the ballot.The new NBC News poll found Republicans have just a 1-point advantage over Democrats on “dealing with the economy,” a margin that has consistently been 15-20 points in favor of Republicans going back to 2018.Chuck Rocha, a Democratic strategist who advised freshman Sen. Ruben Gallego’s winning campaign in Arizona last year, said that economic hardship gives his party’s candidates an opening to win key segments of the electorate — including the young men who helped Trump take back the White House — if they focus on making the argument that their policies are better than the president’s.“Right now, people’s prices are going up. Their prices are going up for the utility bills, going up for lots of things in their life, because of the tariffs,” Rocha said. “If you show up and start talking to folks about actually trying to provide for their family, there’s going to be a lot of men who right now feel a little regret because they were promised lower prices and they’re not getting them.”Moreno said he was not worried “about the politics” of the shutdown, noting that he has pledged to serve no more than two Senate terms and, as a native of Colombia, is constitutionally ineligible to be president. But he said Republicans need to better articulate their message: that they hold Democrats responsible for the shutdown and its economic ramifications.He specifically alluded to recent remarks from House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., who in an interview with Fox News acknowledged that families would “suffer” because of the shutdown but emphasized that Democrats needed to exert their political “leverage” to address health care costs.“We’ve got to speak up more loudly and more aggressively, like [Senate Majority Leader] John Thune did the other day. I think we haven’t shown enough outrage. We do it privately, but we haven’t done it enough publicly. Just call these guys out. It’s disgusting,” Moreno said.“We need to speak clearly, with humanity, not political talk,” he added.Trump remains popular with Republicans on things like immigration enforcement — Betty Szretter says she still supports the president on that issue — but pocketbook issues more often than not have an outsize role in swaying election outcomes.The NBC News poll found 83% of registered voters said the “cost of living” was their single most important issue or very important to them, a number that was at 58% when they were asked about “immigration and border security.”On the Asia trip last week, Trump nevertheless told reporters he had the “highest [poll] numbers I ever had.”He has also directly avoided questions about the economy.“Let’s just make it about this subject,” Trump said at an event centered around an autism announcement last month. “I’d rather not talk about some nonsense on the economy. I will say this: The economy is unbelievable.”Republicans running in swing House seats across the country, however, have not been eager to talk about Trump’s economy.NBC News reached out to eight Republicans either defending swing seats they currently hold or challenging Democrats in winnable seats; seven did not return requests seeking comment. Two judges issue rulings in lawsuits challenging Trump admin. withholding SNAP benefits13:24Brinker Harding is a Republican city councilman in Omaha running to replace Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., who is not seeking re-election in one of the most up-for-grab seats in the country. Harding said he believes that once the midterm campaigns really begin, moves Trump has made will have the economy in a better place.“Come next November, Republicans’ tax cuts for working families and small businesses, in addition to projected interest rate cuts, will have the American economy moving more than it already is,” he said.Other swing state Republicans where vulnerable Democrats are on the ballot are pinning economic woes on those Democrats.“Maine’s issues are especially pronounced on the economic front,” said Lauren LePage, who is the Republican national committeewoman from Maine. “And the blame for our high cost of living, nation-leading electricity price increases and more lies at the feet of Democrats here.”Maine is home to one of the nation’s most closely watched 2026 Senate contests as Democrats try to knock off Republican Sen. Susan Collins. LePage’s father, former Republican Gov. Paul LePage, is himself running to challenge Rep. Jared Golden, D-Maine, in a House seat that is considered winnable for either party.Other Republicans, including some former Trump allies, are acknowledging that prices have remained stubbornly high during Trump’s second term in office.“Prices have not come down at all,” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said on “The Tim Dillon Show” last week. “The job market is extremely difficult. Wages have not gone up.”She has also made an uncharacteristic pivot in recent weeks. After being one of Trump’s staunchest defenders, she has been critical of the president and her own party of late, agreeing with Democrats that the Affordable Care Act tax credits should be included as part of any deal to reopen the government.“When it comes to the point where families are spending anywhere from $1,500 to $2,000 a month and looking at hikes coming on their insurance premiums, I think that’s unforgivable,” she told NBC News in early October.For people like Betty Szretter, they just want the fight to be over and the focus to return to Americans hurting in the current economic climate.“I would say practice what you preach and save the country as a true servant,” she said when asked what she would say to Trump directly. “There are not a lot of people who use their wealth to actually help others. Really no one.”Matt DixonMatt Dixon is a senior national politics reporter for NBC News, based in Florida.Jonathan AllenJonathan Allen is a senior national politics reporter for NBC News. Henry J. GomezHenry J. Gomez is a senior national political reporter for NBC News
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Nov. 3, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Jane C. TimmPennsylvania voters on Tuesday will decide in an unusually contentious election whether three Democratic justices should remain on the state Supreme Court for another 10-year term, a vote that could result in a deadlocked bench for years if they are removed.One of those three justices, David Wecht, warned what such a scenario would mean for the critical battleground state.“It would be disastrous. It’s extremely hard to work with a shorthanded court,” Wecht told NBC News in an interview on Friday. “I have experienced the six-member court, and a six-member court resulted in a lot of deadlocks and a lot of stalemates and a lot of increased work for the remaining six. That was just when we were one seat down with the court. If the Court were to be three seats down, there would be a lot of 2-to-2 ties.”Wecht, along with Justices Christine Donohue and Kevin Dougherty, are the three members of Democrats’ 5-2 majority on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court who are up a retention election on Tuesday.Judicial retention elections, which happen after a decade on the bench in Pennsylvania, are yes-or-no votes that are typically sleepy downballot contests.Few Pennsylvania justices have lost their jobs in this way. But with Democrats’ majority at stake ahead of the 2026 and 2028 elections, this year’s retention vote has drawn outsize money and attention. If all three justices were to lose and the Republican-controlled Senate and Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro can’t agree on temporary appointments, Pennsylvania’s high court could be deadlocked 2-2 through the end of 2027.“You would have a four-member court for two full calendar years, because there’s no way, there’s no way that this Senate is going to confirm a single nominee that Gov. Shapiro sends them,” Wecht said.A deadlocked state Supreme Court court would defer to lower courts, and even if it did decide a case, it likely wouldn’t set new precedent for the state, according to Wecht, who said four members are required to set a precedent. Unanimous decisions are very rare on the state’s top court, which typically tackles difficult questions of law.“If you have a 3-1 result in Smith v. Jones — it applies to Smith and Jones. It governs the case between Smith and Jones, but it’s not a precedent for any other case,” he said. “Precedent is the whole reason for our court. We’re not just deciding Smith versus Jones, we’re deciding a question of law that applies for now and in the future throughout Pennsylvania for everybody.”The retention elections have drawn major ad spending and attention. Former President Barack Obama and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro have publicly supported the three Democratic justices. On Sunday night, President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social urging Pennsylvanians to “Vote ‘NO, NO, NO’ on Liberal Justices Donohue, Dougherty, and Wecht.'””Attention Pennsylvania: On November 4th, you can bring back the Rule of Law, and stand up for the Constitution,” Trump wrote.One conservative group’s mailer, which Wecht has vocally criticized, claimed the “liberal Supreme Court gerrymandered our congressional districts to help Democrats win,” even though the court had ruled in 2018 that a GOP-drawn map was unconstitutional.Wecht said the reaction to that ruling has contributed to the divisiveness of this election.“When you have a small child and you take away from the small child a prize plaything or toy, that small child is going to wail and scream and cause a ruckus. That’s exactly what happened,” Wecht said. “I think has been the poison that is infected the approach of some of the same partisans and their descendants who are now assailing us now in what’s supposed to be a nonpartisan election.”Jane C. TimmJane C. Timm is a senior reporter for NBC News.
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Nov. 13, 2025, 2:48 PM ESTBy Matt Dixon and Allan SmithPresident Donald Trump’s once unquestioned grip on his MAGA political base is showing signs of strain as some of his supporters have started pushing back on White House policy proposals they see as contrary to his long-held promises on immigration and the economy.As Trump takes heat from even the most loyal segments of his political base, he has remained defiant.“MAGA was my idea. MAGA was nobody else’s idea,” Trump told Fox News host Laura Ingraham in an interview that aired Monday. “I know what MAGA wants better than anybody else, and MAGA wants to see our country thrive.”Trump remains popular with Republicans, and he’s still able to make or break candidates in Republican primaries — 88% of Republican registered voters approved of Trump in the latest NBC News poll, conducted in late October, before the latest elections. Among voters who consider themselves part of the MAGA movement, it’s even higher — 96% — highlighting the loyalty he commands from core supporters. But there’s a belief among some of Trump’s MAGA supporters that is spilling out online that the president is increasingly swayed by wealthy donors who have access to him at private White House events, his exclusive Mar-a-Lago club and the luxury boxes he sits in when he attends sporting events, including a Washington Commanders football game on Sunday. “President Trump is instinctually America First, but things are seriously askew,” said Paul Dans, the architect of Project 2025 who is running against Trump-endorsed Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina’s GOP primary. “America First is experiencing a hijacking right now. He’s [Trump’s] getting bad advice and is being kept in a bubble.”It’s a shift in focus that some on the right say can be traced back to the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the influential conservative leader of Turning Point USA who was gunned down in September.“Charlie Kirk was the last person who could walk into the Oval Office and speak on behalf of the base,” Mike Cernovich, a prominent MAGA social media personality, posted on X. “Now it’s all donors.”The White House pushed back on the idea that Trump is distancing himself from the ethos of his MAGA agenda on key policy planks, such as on H-1B visas.“In record time, President Trump has done more than any president in modern history to tighten our immigration laws and put American workers first,” White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said.On Wednesday, the Trump administration had to contend with another issue that has divided and frustrated his base: the case of Jeffrey Epstein. The House Oversight Committee released more than 20,000 pages of Epstein emails — some of which discussed Trump. A bipartisan pair of House lawmakers also secured enough signatures — including from some Trump allies — to force a vote in the coming days compelling the Justice Department to release all of its documents in the Epstein case against Trump’s wishes. Democrats release Epstein emails mentioning Trump02:28A Trump ally said that if the issues prompting loud online pushback continue, there could be broader political problems electorally for Trump and Republicans. But, they said, they are not convinced that point has been reached yet, because past base concern has often been overblown.“Sure, could this all end up adding up and become a real problem? Yes, it could,” said the person, who, like others in this article, was granted anonymity to speak candidly. “But that, I do not think, is the point we are at yet. Worth watching, sure, but I think much of this will pass.”’What an atrocious thing to say’The right-wing backlash intensified this week following Trump’s interview with Ingraham, which aired Monday and Tuesday. Trump batted away concerns about affordability as a Democratic “con job,” and he said a controversial new proposal for 50-year mortgages was “not even a big deal.” He also talked up having 600,000 Chinese students study at U.S. universities and said the U.S. needed to bring in more workers from overseas through the H-1B visa program because native-born Americans lack “certain talents.” “What an atrocious thing to say,” actor and Trump supporter Kevin Sorbo posted on X of Trump’s comments on American workers. “This will cost republicans the midterms.” The H-1B visa issue has split two segments of the new GOP base. The right-wing MAGA supporters who have long backed Trump oppose the program because they believe it hands over jobs to foreigners that could be filled by Americans, while the tech industry, a newly powerful political force on the right, has long supported the program as a way to recruit high-skill labor. On his “Human Events” program Wednesday, right-wing influencer Jack Posobiec scrutinized Trump’s visa policy following his interview with Ingraham and asked Tom Sauer, another influencer on the right, “what message” the administration’s posture sends to MAGA supporters. “I think it really says we don’t value you as much,” Sauer said. “We worship GDP, and we worship profits more than we do the health of the American worker and the health of the American nation.”The White House pushed back on the idea that Trump’s recent comments were not aligned with the MAGA political base, noting an executive order he signed increasing the cost it takes to obtain an H-1B visa.“The $100,000 payment required to supplement new H1-B visa applications is a significant first step to stop abuses of the system and ensure American workers are no longer replaced by lower-paid foreign labor,” Rogers, the White House spokesperson, said. Trump administration raises fee for H-1B visas to $100,00000:49The idea for a 50-year mortgage — which was not something Trump previously touted — also faced withering criticisms. Commentators said the proposal would lead to homeowners paying significantly more in interest over the life of their mortgage, something that would benefit banks that hold those mortgages. “The idea behind the 15- and 30-year mortgage is that you eventually own the home you live in, whereas the 50-year mortgage abandons this pretense altogether and fully embraces the idea of housing as a speculative asset,” right-wing activist Christopher Rufo posted on X. “Not good, unless you’re a bank.”Others defended the president, saying critics had their facts wrong while acknowledging that the White House may need to work on its messaging. Trump said during his interview with Ingraham that he is comfortable with 600,000 Chinese students studying in American universities on visas — which is roughly current levels — but angered many in his MAGA base who believe Trump promised to decrease those numbers.“This is about one interview, not any policy changes,” a former Trump campaign official said of the Ingraham interview. “On the Chinese visas, he’s not pushing for more; it’s just the status quo. On H-1Bs, he signed an executive order making them more expensive, and the Labor Department has announced probes into H-1B abuse.”“So, it’s not like he did a 180 on anything,” the former official added. “It’s just bad clips from an interview.” ‘Get out and meet with the people’Trump has run all three of his presidential campaigns as a populist, but throughout this term, he has been surrounded by billionaires. At his inauguration, some of the richest men in the world — Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and tech titan Elon Musk — had VIP seats. Musk then became one of Trump’s top advisers, wreaking havoc on the federal government by trying to get rid of large numbers of civil servants. Trump frequently spends his weekends at Mar-a-Lago. He received criticism for hosting a lavish “Great Gatsby”-inspired Halloween party — with the theme “A Little Party Never Killed Nobody” — as federal workers went without pay and low-income food benefits were set to expire for millions of people during the government shutdown. Trump has also traveled across the country less in his second administration. At this point in his first term, he had gone to 27 states; this year, he’s done just 15. He hasn’t held a rally-style event since July 3. Trump has, however, done a significant amount of international travel, going to 14 countries.Dans said that as Americans are struggling with rising electric and utility bills, property taxes and health care premiums, the president needed to go around the country and hear from more than just the “Mar-a-Lago dining set.” “I would encourage the president to get out and meet with the people and actually hear from voices who are being shut out by the inner circle,” he said. Seeming to respond to right-wing criticism that the president’s attention has drifted from key domestic issues, Vice President JD Vance posted on X after last week’s Democratic electoral romps: “We need to focus on the home front.” “The president has done a lot that has already paid off in lower interest rates and lower inflation, but we inherited a disaster from Joe Biden and Rome wasn’t built in a day,” he added.This is not the first time this year Trump has faced pointed criticism from supporters. A number of prominent voices on the right raised objections to his decision to strike Iran over the summer amid its conflict with Israel. Many too blasted the administration for pledging to release a trove of information on Epstein before suddenly pulling back. That blowback subsided. But last week’s elections reignited some concerns, after Democrats performed better than expected in key races. NBC News polling released earlier this month showed that just 34% of registered voters believe Trump has “lived up” to expectations on the economy.The president “needs to recalibrate and address the big stuff,” one Trump ally said, pointing to inflation, jobs and the overall economy. This person also said the president needs to talk up policies from his so-called big, beautiful bill, which polling has found to be unpopular as a whole.“I’ve watched the right wing implode over the last two weeks and the reason we are is because many are afraid to legitimately criticize the admin,” Savanah Hernandez, a conservative political commentator, posted on X on Tuesday. “It’s our job to openly put the pressure on when we don’t feel the country is headed in the right direction.”But the former campaign official said on one of Trump’s core promises, immigration, he has been consistent. They noted that those who have been let into the country of late have mostly been white South Africans, a move largely backed by Trump supporters.“Obviously, refugee admissions are hilariously low and mostly white South Africans,” the person said, adding that “a lot of the loudest voices on the right online” tend to “spiral over everything.” “That is one thing hard to deal with,” they said.The most recent NBC News poll found Trump’s overall approval rating was at 43%, a 4-point dip from March, while 51% said he had lived up to their expectations on the issue of immigration and border security. Some allies pointed the finger less at Trump losing his way than how the White House has handled messaging.“The MAGA pushback on affordability wasn’t big until the H-1B visas [comment],” a Republican close to the White House said. “Now it’s a firestorm.”This person, who said the current White House messaging on the economy “appears pretty chaotic,” added that the way for the administration to turn the tide is to do a better job of informing the public how Trump’s policies are making life more affordable. “Don’t send him around the country cutting ribbons at factories,” this person said. “Come with facts.”Matt DixonMatt Dixon is a senior national politics reporter for NBC News, based in Florida.Allan SmithAllan Smith is a political reporter for NBC News.Henry J. Gomez, Jonathan Allen, Megan Shannon, Elyse Perlmutter-Gumbiner and Tara Prindiville contributed.
October 11, 2025
Oct. 11, 2025, 8:48 AM EDT / Updated Oct. 11, 2025, 10:13 AM EDTBy Kelly O’Donnell and Nick DuffyFormer President Joe Biden is undergoing a new phase of treatment for an aggressive form of cancer that was diagnosed in May, a spokesperson said Saturday.”As part of a treatment plan for prostate cancer, President Biden is currently undergoing radiation therapy and hormone treatment,” the spokesperson for the former president said.The radiation treatment is expected to span five weeks and marks a new point in his care, a source familiar told NBC News. He has already been taking a pill form of hormone medication.Biden diagnosed with ‘aggressive’ form of prostate cancer01:13Last month, Biden, 82, also had a skin cancer treatment known as Mohs surgery. A large bandage on his forehead was visible in public appearances at that time.Following that procedure, his physician wrote in a memo that “all cancerous tissue was successfully removed” and that “no further treatment is required.”The former president announced in May that he had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer that had already metastasized to his bones.His office said at the time that he was pursuing several treatment options to ensure “effective management” of the illness.In a post on X after he shared his diagnosis, Biden said, “Cancer touches us all. Like so many of you, Jill and I have learned that we are strongest in the broken places. Thank you for lifting us up with love and support.”At the time, multiple oncologists told NBC News that given the nature of his cancer and the fact that it had already metastasized, it was possible that Biden’s affliction had gone undiagnosed for years.Men his age are not usually screened for prostate cancer, with the American Cancer Society recommending that men in their 50s and 60s get screened every two years. It’s unclear whether Biden was screened for prostate cancer during his last medical exam in office, which took place last year.The former president, who turns 83 next month, is said to be “doing well.”In 2023, while he was still in office, Biden had a skin lesion removed during a routine physical exam that was later found to be cancerous. A physician at the time said that no further treatment was required.Biden left the White House in January, just months after he suspended his re-election campaign last year, endorsing his vice president, Kamala Harris, for re-election instead.His re-election campaign and the final months of his presidency were marred by allegations that he was too old to run again and that he was not mentally fit. The former president and his family have repeatedly denied these claims.Kelly O’DonnellKelly O’Donnell is Senior White House correspondent for NBC News.Nick DuffyNick Duffy is a platforms editor for NBC News.
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