Politics
Trump fears impeachment if Republicans lose midterms

- Trump urges GOP lawmakers to rally behind him for midterms.
- Tells them to campaign on gender issues, healthcare.
- ‘You gotta win midterms,’ Trump at Washington conference.
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has warned that his political future could be on the line if Republicans fail to hold on to Congress in the midterm elections.
Speaking to party lawmakers, Trump said a defeat would open the door for Democrats to move quickly to impeach him, urging Republicans to stay united and win over voters ahead of the polls.
“You gotta win the midterms ’cause, if we don’t win the midterms, it’s just gonna be – I mean, they’ll find a reason to impeach me,” Trump told Republican lawmakers at a retreat in Washington.
“I’ll get impeached.”
Ahead of the November elections, which could stall his agenda and expose him to congressional investigations, Trump teased and prodded allies who narrowly control the US House of Representatives. He told them to put aside their differences and sell his policies on gender, healthcare and election integrity to an American electorate angry about the cost of living.
“They say that when you win the presidency, you lose the midterm,” Trump said. “I wish you could explain to me what the hell’s going on with the mind of the public.”
Few remarks on cost of living
Fresh off an audacious military operation against Venezuela’s leader Nicolas Maduro, Trump has come under pressure to pivot towards domestic issues, especially concerns about inflation and prices. On Tuesday, Trump said little about the latter issue, except that he had inherited the problem from Democrats and that Republicans should run on strong US stock market gains.
He made only brief mention of the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol by his supporters, while Democrats in Congress marked the fifth anniversary of the riot by accusing Republicans of a “whitewash” of history.
The lawmakers met at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, an institution chartered and named by Congress. Trump purged its board of Democratic appointees last year, and the remaining trustees voted in December to rename the centre to include Trump’s name alongside President Kennedy’s.
There, in an unstructured speech lasting 84 minutes, Trump reflected on his wife’s advice that he stop dancing in public.
He repeated several falsehoods, including that Washington had seen no homicides in seven months. Washington police reported a murder on New Year’s Eve and said 127 homicides took place in 2025. He said “I don’t get to play much” golf after doing so as recently as Sunday and regularly throughout his time in office.
Trump predicted Republicans would beat the odds and deliver an “epic midterm victory,” but also groused about some members who don’t fall in line.
Every seat in the House and a third of those in the Senate will be contested in November. Sitting presidents have lost House seats in every midterm since George W. Bush in 2006.
Trump urged his party to more forcefully push back on Democrats’ near-unified message on healthcare, as the minority party advocates extending expired subsidies that made Obamacare insurance more affordable for millions of Americans.
He said conservative members should be “a little flexible” about their insistence on including Hyde Amendment provisions in their healthcare plans, which would prevent taxpayer dollars from going to abortion services.
“All of these issues are very important issues, but you can own healthcare,” he told lawmakers. “Figure it out.”
Trump has moved to expand executive power
Trump was impeached twice by the Democratic-led House of Representatives during his 2017–2021 term in office. Democrats faulted his Ukraine policy and the January 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol by his supporters. The Senate voted to acquit him in both cases.
Some House Democrats have already introduced articles of impeachment accusing Trump of abuses of power in his second term, allegations the White House denies.
Republicans currently control the House by five votes, a narrow margin that has frustrated both Trump and Speaker Mike Johnson. Trump has moved to expand his powers to act alone in areas ranging from immigration to military action and federal regulation. He faces an important Supreme Court ruling soon on whether his broad use of tariffs usurped a power the Constitution granted to Congress.
House Republicans have shown enormous deference to Trump, ceding much of Congress’ authority over spending and other matters to his administration. But they have started to show glimmers of independence. The House could vote this week to override a veto Trump issued last month that cancelled infrastructure projects in Colorado and Florida, though it is not clear whether the effort will get the two-thirds majority needed.
Politics
Khamenei insists ‘won’t back down’ in face of Iran protests

- Trump to be “overthrown” like Iran’s imperial dynasty in 1979: Khamenei.
- Rights groups accuse authorities of opening fire on protesters.
- Pahlavi says rallies show how “massive crowd forces LEAs to retreat”.
Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Friday insisted that the government would “not back down” in the face of protests after the biggest rallies yet in an almost two-week movement sparked by anger over the rising cost of living.
Chanting slogans including “death to the dictator” and setting fire to official buildings, crowds of people opposed to the establishment marched through major cities late on Thursday.
Internet monitor Netblocks said authorities had imposed a total connectivity blackout late on Thursday and added early on Friday that the country has “now been offline for 12 hours […] in an attempt to suppress sweeping protests”.
The demonstrations represent one of the biggest challenges yet to the nation in its over four-and-a-half decades of existence, with protesters openly calling for an end to its theocratic rule.
But Khamenei struck a defiant tone in his first comments on the protests that have been escalating since January 3, calling the demonstrators “vandals” and “saboteurs”, in a speech broadcast on state TV.
Khamenei said US President Donald Trump’s hands “are stained with the blood of more than a thousand Iranians”, in apparent reference to Israel’s June war against the Islamic republic which the US supported and joined with strikes of its own.
He predicted the “arrogant” US leader would be “overthrown” like the imperial dynasty that ruled Iran up to the 1979 revolution.
“Last night in Tehran, a bunch of vandals came and destroyed a building that belongs to them to please the US president,” he said in an address to supporters, as men and women in the audience chanted the mantra of “death to America”.
“Everyone knows the Islamic republic came to power with the blood of hundreds of thousands of honourable people, it will not back down in the face of saboteurs,” he added.
Trump said late on Thursday that “enthusiasm to overturn that regime is incredible” and warned that if the Iranian authorities responded by killing protesters, “we’re going to hit them very hard. We’re ready to do it.”
Even larger
AFP has verified videos showing crowds of people, as well as vehicles honking in support, filling a part of the vast Ayatollah Kashani Boulevard late on Thursday.
The crowd could be heard chanting “death to the dictator” in reference to Khamenei, 86, who has ruled the republic since 1989.
Other videos showed significant protests in other cities, including Tabriz in the north and the holy city of Mashhad in the east, as well as the Kurdish-populated west of the country, including the regional hub Kermanshah.
Several videos showed protesters setting fire to the entrance to the regional branch of state television in the central city of Isfahan. It was not immediately possible to verify the images.
Flames were also seen in the governor’s building in Shazand, the capital of Markazi province in central Iran, after protesters gathered outside, other videos showed.
The protests late on Thursday were the biggest in Iran since 2022-2023 rallies nationwide sparked by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, who had been arrested for allegedly violating the Islamic republic’s strict dress code.
Rights groups have accused authorities of firing on protesters in the current demonstrations, killing dozens. However, the latest videos from Tehran did not show intervention by security forces.
The son of the shah of Iran ousted by the 1979 Islamic Revolution, US-based Reza Pahlavi, who had called for major protests on Thursday, urged a new show of force in the streets on Friday.
Pahlavi, in a new video message early on Friday, said Thursday’s rallies showed how “a massive crowd forces the repressive forces to retreat”.
He called for bigger protests on Friday “to make the crowd even larger so that the regime’s repressive power becomes even weaker”.
Politics
Moscow says US released two Russian crew from seized tanker

MOSCOW: Russia on Friday said the United States had decided to release two Russian members of the crew of a Russian-flagged oil tanker that Washington seized earlier this week.
The American authorities said the tanker was part of a shadow fleet that carried oil for countries such as Venezuela, Russia and Iran in violation of US sanctions, and seized it in the North Atlantic despite the ship being escorted by the Russian navy.
“In response to our request, US President Donald Trump has decided to release two Russian citizens aboard the Marinera tanker, previously detained by the United States during an operation in the North Atlantic,” Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in a statement.
“We welcome this decision and express our gratitude to the US leadership,” she added.
Russian envoy Kirill Dmitriev said on Telegram that Trump decided to release “all Russians” on board the Marinera tanker.
The United States said previously the Marinera’s crew could be prosecuted — which Russia said was “categorically unacceptable.”
Moscow on Thursday accused Washington of stoking tensions and threatening international shipping with the seizure of the tanker, which it has cast as illegal.
Russia’s foreign ministry said the move will “only result in further military and political tensions”, adding that it was worried by “Washington’s willingness to generate acute international crisis situations.”
Politics
India-US trade deal stalled after Modi did not call Trump, says official

- Trump warns tariffs will rise unless Russian oil imports are curbed.
- Indian rupee hits record low on US tariff pressure.
- India seeks mid-range tariff rate; Lutnick says offer has expired.
NEW DELHI: India’s trade pact with the United States was delayed because Prime Minister Narendra Modi did not make a telephone call to President Donald Trump to close a deal they were negotiating, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Friday.
The trade talks fell apart last year and Trump doubled tariffs on Indian goods in August to 50%, the world’s highest rate, including a levy of 25% in retaliation for India’s purchases of Russian oil.
“It’s all set up and you have got to have Modi call the President. And they were uncomfortable doing it,” Lutnick said in an interview on the All-In podcast, a US show by four venture capitalists that focuses on business and technology.
“So Modi didn’t call.”
The comments came after Trump stepped up the pressure for talks with a warning this week that tariffs could rise further unless India curbs its Russian oil imports.
That step pushed the Indian rupee to a record low and spooked investors waiting for progress in two-way negotiations for a trade deal that remains elusive.
India still seeks a tariff rate between Washington’s offers to Britain and Vietnam that had formerly been agreed but the offer has expired, Lutnick added.
India’s trade ministry did not immediately respond to an e-mailed request for comment on Lutnick’s remarks.
New Delhi and Washington were very close to a trade deal last year but a communication breakdown led to the collapse of any potential pact, Reuters reported.
It cited an Indian government official involved in the talks as saying that Modi could not have called Trump, for fear that a one-sided conversation would put him on the spot.
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