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Top MAGA Lackey Makes Shocking Admission About Trump Presidency

Mike Johnson has addressed the looming potential disaster facing Trump.

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House Speaker Mike Johnson, one of Trump’s most trusted advisors, suggested that the term of the leader of the “MAGA” slogan could be cut short as early as November.

After President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address, marked by his usual colorful language and rambling remarks, Johnson spoke live on Newsmax and was surprisingly frank about the future of the Trump presidency.

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“It takes four years, not two, to turn things around,” Johnson said, adding, “If we lose the midterm elections—and God forbid—if we lose the majority in the House, that would be the real end of the Trump presidency. So we have to keep going.”

Trump himself has already raised the possibility of impeachment if Republicans lose a significant number of seats in the House. According to Puck News, the president has a $1.4 billion fund to prepare for this eventuality.

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However, Trump has always been reluctant to fund the campaigns of younger Republican candidates. But Puck points out that White House Chief of Staff Suzy Wilms, her deputy James Blair, and his former campaign manager, Chris LaCivita, are carefully considering which campaigns Trump should fund, if any.

“No major decisions have been made yet, and they are still working to get the president’s approval for spending,” a member of the campaign team told Puck.

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Trump may have realized the urgency of the situation after his party’s crushing defeat in the elections, even as he delivered his annual State of the Union address.

Three Democrats won seats in the House of Representatives in runoff elections in Maine and Pennsylvania, allowing the party to retain a slim majority in both chambers and offering an early indication of voter priorities in two states expected to be crucial for control of Congress in November.

This stands in stark contrast to Trump’s insistence that he has orchestrated a “historic economic transformation” and that the housing crisis is a “dirty, rotten lie” invented by Democrats.

In both states, housing affordability, housing itself, and the punitive methods of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) were among the top concerns for voters, according to the Morning Star and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Meanwhile, Democratic candidates performed 10 to 14 points higher than their 2024 presidential campaign results in 20 statewide runoff elections in Virginia, New York, Minnesota, and Connecticut.

In a Texas district Trump won by 17 points in 2024, Taylor Rehmet, a newcomer to the state Senate, defeated his Republican opponent by 13 points, becoming the first Democrat to hold the seat in decades.

These results have created new hotly contested districts heading into the midterm elections, intensifying competition in other districts and forcing Johnson to appeal directly to voters.

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