Donald Trump has accused Iran of trying to stall on making a peace agreement by running down the clock before November’s US midterm elections in the hope of getting better terms.“They thought they were going to out-wait me, you know, ‘We’ll out-wait him, he’s got the midterms,” the US president told a meeting of his cabinet at the White House on Wednesday.He insisted the approach – supposedly aimed at ratcheting up pressure on the US and global economies by keeping the strategically vital strait of Hormuz closed – would fail, and claimed that Iran “wants very much to make a deal”.“I don’t care about the midterms. Look what happened last night,” Trump said, an apparent reference to the triumph of Ken Paxton, who he had endorsed, over the sitting Republican senator John Cornyn in the Republican Senate primary.Trump accuses Iran of stalling peace deal to ‘out-wait’ him until US midtermsTrump said the Iranian economy was in freefall, suggesting that made it imperative for Iran to compromise. “They have 250% inflation, their money has no value, their whole economic system is broken down.”His comments, at the 12th cabinet meeting of Trump’s second term, came as talks aimed at ending the near-three-month conflict are said to be at a crucial stage. Current attempts to reach a deal had so far failed, he claimed, because “we’re not satisfied with it”.Read the full storyTrump ramps up attacks on Talarico after Paxton’s Texas Senate runoff winRepublican leaders rushed to throw their weight behind Ken Paxton following his big primary victory in Texas over the four-term US senator, John Cornyn, amid anxiety within the party over his prospects in November’s general election.Hours after the race was called, Donald Trump – who backed Paxton, despite intense concern among establishment Republicans – on Truth Social attacked Paxton’s Democratic rival in the midterm elections.Read the full storyProtests erupt as hunger strike rocks New Jersey ICE jailProtests against immigration enforcement at a facility where detainees are on a hunger and labor strike erupted in fresh violence on Tuesday night as federal officers sprayed chemicals and charged demonstrators outside the jail in New Jersey.Following hours of relative quiet, a day after masked and armored Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) personnel pepper-sprayed US senator Andy Kim, tension ramped up again outside the Delaney Hall facility on the fifth day of the strike.Read the full story‘Scum’: Trump attacks US states’ efforts to regulate prediction marketsDonald Trump wrote in a social media post it was “critically important” that the federal government retain control over the multibillion-dollar prediction market industry, as he cast a critical eye on state attempts to impose new restrictions.Read the full storyTrump official says plans in works to stop processing international flights in sanctuary citiesThe Trump administration has threatened to stop processing international flights in major cities around the country as a reaction to protests against immigration enforcement.Markwayne Mullin, the homeland security secretary, said during an interview with Fox News on Tuesday that the administration is “drawing up plans” to take the action, in response to days of clashes at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in New Jersey.Read the full storyCompany led by Republican fundraiser pardoned by Trump wins $106m federal contractThe day before Donald Trump’s first term ended in 2021, he inked a pardon for Elliott Broidy, a scandal-plagued Republican fundraiser and former Republican National Committee official who had pleaded guilty three months earlier to trying to illegally lobby Trump and his administration.Last month, a company headed by Broidy won a $106m contract from the Department of Justice, according to federal contracting records.Read the full storyWhat else happened today:
Trump news at a glance: president lobs accusation at Iran and threat at Oman with peace talks in limbo
Trump claims Iran intends to wait until US midterm elections in the hope of getting better deal – key US politics stories from Wednesday, 27 May











