Senator Loses It After Trump Turns on Him

A feud between President Donald Trump and Sen. Thom Tillis intensified on May 22, 2026, when Trump branded the North Carolina Republican a “nitpicker” and a “quitter” on Truth Social after weeks of the senator challenging White House nominees and policies, escalating a clash that has turned into open warfare between the White House and the retiring senator.

Tillis’ threat to sink Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche’s nomination unless Blanche publicly repudiates the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol became a flashpoint. Days later, on June 5, 2026, Trump escalated during a press gaggle aboard Air Force One. “Senator Tillis is a loser!” the president declared. “That’s why he didn’t run! He didn’t run because I wouldn’t support him. He’s just an angry man because he’s not going to be a senator any longer. He wasn’t respected in the Senate.” Trump also lashed out at Tillis’ past clashes with Cabinet members, claiming the senator “fought Pete Hegseth, Pete Hegseth turned out to be a gem.”

The “loser” attack landed days after Blanche himself appeared to contradict the president, telling a House Appropriations subcommittee that the Justice Department was no longer proceeding with the $1.8 billion anti-weaponization fund. A day later, Trump muddied that picture, telling reporters he would “have to ask the lawyers” whether the fund was dead or merely paused — adding, “The weaponization fund, as far as I’m concerned, was a beautiful thing. I love it. I think it’s so important.”

Trump Lashes Out on Truth Social

Trump wrote on Truth Social that “People don’t remember that Thom Tillis, the weak and ineffective Senator from the Great State of North Carolina, a State I won, including primaries, six consecutive times, didn’t have the courage to fight it out in the Senate, remain in place, and run again for office, a thing he desperately wanted to do.”

Trump dismissed Tillis as “always fighting against the Republican Party, and ME, mostly on things that didn’t matter,” and claimed the senator abandoned his reelection bid only after being denied a presidential endorsement.

Tillis fired back on May 22, 2026, in a long post laying out his grievances against the administration: the anti-weaponization fund, Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte’s push for 50-year mortgages and what Tillis described as Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s housing bill, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick’s deals giving the federal government equity stakes in semiconductor and rare-earths firms — which Tillis accused of “using taxpayer money to transform publicly traded companies into state-owned enterprises” — Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth “firing our very best generals,” and the administration’s posture toward Russian President Vladimir Putin over atrocities in Ukraine.

“If opposing these things makes me a RINO, then I gladly accept that nickname. We need Republicans to do well in November, but the stupid stuff is killing our chances!” Tillis wrote in response to the president.

A Blanche Confirmation in Doubt

Tillis’ threat to sink Blanche’s nomination unless the acting attorney general publicly repudiates Jan. 6 is a central point of contention. Tillis has also savaged the $1.8 billion Jan. 6 anti-weaponization compensation fund — a proposal championed by conservative activist Ed Martin — calling it “using billions of taxpayer dollars to compensate convicted felons and thugs who attacked police.”

On June 3, 2026, Tillis appeared on CNBC to criticize Trump’s decision on June 2, 2026, to install Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence, a move that left Pulte simultaneously chairing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac while overseeing the U.S. intelligence community. Tillis called Pulte an “incendiary attack dog” with no path to Senate confirmation as the permanent DNI.

“Whoever told the president to go ahead and commit to this publicly before vetting it should lose their jobs, because they should know that the math just works against Pulte being confirmed,” Tillis said on “Squawk Box.”

The Pulte appointment has also drawn fire from Sen. Mark Warner, the Virginia Democrat who serves as vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. A person familiar with the matter confirmed to MS NOW on June 3, 2026, that Warner has warned that all options are on the table, including tanking a bipartisan deal to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act if the White House does not reverse course — a threat that would jeopardize one of the federal government’s most consequential surveillance authorities.

The Powell Probe and a Fed Fight

The roots of the current standoff stretch back to earlier disputes over the Federal Reserve chair nomination: Tillis had threatened to block Trump’s pick, Kevin Warsh, unless the Justice Department dropped its probe into outgoing Fed Chair Jerome Powell. The broader fight has centered on what Tillis and others describe as the politicization of federal investigations.

Tillis, freed from the calculations of reelection politics by his decision not to seek another term, refused to retreat. He defended every front he has opened against the White House in his final months in office — and signaled there are more to come.

What began as a dispute over the Big Beautiful Bill has metastasized into something broader and more personal: a sitting Republican senator using the floor, the airwaves and social media to challenge the president of his own party on nominees, policy and political judgment, week after week.

With the 2026 midterm elections approaching and Republican majorities exposed, Trump has dared the senator to keep defying him. Tillis, by every available measure, intends to.

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