The man running a war Americans don’t want is in … Kentucky
This is the May 19, 2026, edition of “The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe” newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“The fact that the president’s losing sleep over my race, posting on social media, the fact they had to send the secretary of war to the district, that means they’re worried.”
— Rep. Thomas Massie on President Donald Trump’s attacks ahead of today’s primary in Kentucky
JOE’S NOTE
At least Nero stayed in Rome.
Pete Hegseth is fighting a war that conservative foreign policy scholar Robert Kagan says has no precedent in American history — a defeat that “can neither be repaired nor ignored.”
And yet Hegseth left Washington and flew to Kentucky in the middle of that war to campaign against a Republican Donald Trump hates — because that congressman wants the Jeffrey Epstein files released.
Trump has been trying in every way possible to cover up those files. He is doing everything he can, along with all of his billionaire supporters, to destroy a congressman who wants full accountability for the victims of Epstein and all the very powerful people around him. Some say, including the president.
And they call that conservative.
But as I’ve said for 10 years, there is nothing conservative about Donald Trump and his Republican Party. They have exploded the deficit in historic ways. The debt has skyrocketed.
Trump promised to balance the budget. He promised to pay off the debt. No matter when he leaves office, he will have piled on more debt than every other American president combined.
And they wonder why they’re getting crushed.
They don’t care about affordability. They don’t care about working Americans. They only care about doing what Trump tells them to do.
And we see the result:
The Atlas poll, rated A-plus, shows double-digit losses for Republicans on the generic ballot.
The New York Times/Siena poll — which usually trends more Republican than most — now has Democrats up 11 points on the generic ballot, 50 to 39.
Trump’s approval has hit a second-term low: 37%. Sixty-four percent of Americans say the Iran war was the wrong decision.
And the man running that war is in Kentucky.
Ten years ago, on Fox News, Hegseth said the military wouldn’t follow unlawful orders from its commander in chief. There’s a standard, he said. There’s an ethos. It’s on tape.
Now he’s ordered a Pentagon investigation into Sen. Mark Kelly — a retired Navy captain, a highly decorated war hero — for saying the exact same thing Hegseth said before he started blindly chasing power.
It’s a sad display. And American voters are onto it.
CHART OF THE DAY
Source: New York Times/Siena poll of 1,507 registered voters, May 11 to 15, 2026. Margin of error: +/- 2.8 percentage points
HEROISM IN THE FACE OF HATE

Before Amin Abdullah died, he got on his radio.
Already shot, the security guard at the Islamic Center of San Diego radioed a warning to teachers: Lock the classroom doors. Two hundred children were inside.
“By doing this,” the mosque’s imam said, “he saved so many, many, many souls.”
Abdullah, a father of eight, was one of three men killed Monday when two teenage gunmen opened fire outside the Islamic Center — the largest mosque in San Diego County.
Related Posts
More in US News
Top Stories
CENTCOM commander calls Rep. Moulton’s Iran war remark ‘inappropriate’
Jeff Foxworthy stand-up special ‘The Joke’s On Me’ premieres June 1
Trump’s Iran strategy faces its hardest test as Tehran refuses to bend
NFL owners unanimously vote to bring Super Bowl LXIV to Nashville’s new $2 billion stadium in 2030
Trump targets Rep. Thomas Massie in Kentucky’s record-spending primary
Blanche said he won’t recommend a Maxwell pardon. Trump could still grant one.
Hegseth shrugs off ethical limits, hits the campaign trail to slam Trump target
Judge blocks ICE courthouse arrests after government admits false claims
Democrats slam Trump over ‘dangerous and indefensible gift to Vladimir Putin’

