This is the May 20, 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
“There’s a lot of things that President Trump is the first of. No president has been indicted one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight times either.”
—Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche attempting to defend the president by noting his extraordinary history of legal issues
JOE’S NOTE
On the fifth anniversary of the Jan. 6 attacks, Gladys Sicknick traveled from New Jersey to Capitol Hill. Her son Craig walked in carrying his brother Brian’s Capitol Police hat, which the FBI had only returned a month earlier.
“What did he die for?” his mother asked. “What did he die for?”
This week, Donald Trump answered her — with a $1.776 billion weaponization slush fund for people who beat the hell out of her son and other cops.
The number is no coincidence. The same rioters who stormed the Capitol chanting “1776” are now eligible to collect $1.776 billion in taxpayer money.
Sixteen months ago, JD Vance said on “Fox News Sunday”: “If you committed violence on that day, obviously you shouldn’t be pardoned.” Eight days later, Trump pardoned them all.
Now he wants to pay them.
Republicans burdened with all-time low approval ratings should speak against the proposed cop-killer slush fund. But they won’t.
And they’re blindly going along with a Marie Antoinette ballroom funded by the same taxpayers who can’t afford to buy groceries or put gas in their car.
Take your “Support the Blue” flags down, because you don’t support cops. You just support police officers when Trump gives you permission.
But not the Capitol Hill cops who saved your lives on Jan. 6.
You were such cowards about the events of that day that you even refused to put up a plaque honoring the beaten and the dead. And when you finally did, it went up at 4 a.m., in the dark of night, because you still didn’t have the courage to do it in the daylight.
Today, two officers who defended the building filed suit to block the fund. Both still receive death threats.
Republicans in Congress are allowing all of it — the slush fund, the Marie Antoinette ballroom, a war with no end in sight and with little congressional oversight.
Expect Republicans to pay in November.
CHART OF THE DAY



Source: Gallup poll of 1,000 U.S. adults, March 2-18, 2026. Margin of error: ±4 percentage points
ON THIS DATE

On May 20, 1927, American aviator Charles Lindbergh took off on the first nonstop transatlantic flight from New York City’s Roosevelt Field to Paris-Le Bourget Airport, a journey that took 33.5 hours.
WHAT THEY SAID
Jonathan Lemire on Trump’s revenge tour
“He is taking out his foes, but hurting his party’s chances while he does it. This is motivated by vengeance. This is the retribution tour.”










