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Trump earned 2.2 billion during first year back in White House including crypto

Reality Check with Ross Coulthart · Democrats freak out over Trump’s crypto earnings | Katie Pavlich Tonight Full Show · July 4, 2026
Trump earned 2.2 billion during first year back in White House including crypto
Reality Check with Ross Coulthart
Reality Check with Ross Coulthart
Democrats freak out over Trump’s crypto earnings | Katie Pavlich Tonight Full Show
"new financial disclosures show President Trump's income as 2.2 billion during his first year back in the White House, including 1.4 billion from crypto ventures. The news is drawing predictable criticism from Democrats."
President Trump's financial disclosure reveals unprecedented income totaling $2.2 billion during his return to office, with $1.4 billion coming from cryptocurrency ventures. This includes 327 stock purchases made the day before announcing a tariff pause that caused those stocks to soar. While Democrats including Gavin Newsom are calling Trump the most corrupt president in history, his assets are managed through a blind trust with no evidence of insider trading.

About this episode

Katie Palish Tonight covered multiple controversial stories led by President Trump's newly disclosed $2.2 billion income during his first year back in office, including $1.4 billion from cryptocurrency ventures. The disclosure sparked Democratic accusations of corruption from governors Gavin Newsom and JB Pritzker, though Trump's assets are managed through a blind trust. In a national security segment, Georgetown neuroscientist Dr. James Gerardano, who served as forensic expert on the original Havana syndrome cases, confirmed directed energy weapons are being used against Americans domestically in Florida, the DC-Maryland-Delaware area, and the West Coast. These backpack-scalable weapons use rapidly pulsed microwaves to cause neurological damage without thermal signatures. The show also exposed Minnesota Governor Tim Walz's pardon of an illegal alien convicted of repeatedly sexually assaulting a 10-year-old girl, granted specifically to prevent his deportation despite an existing order. Additional coverage included the Trump administration's new protections for ranchers against federal overreach, LA Metro's 86 percent crime increase since ending fare enforcement in 2017, and a self-immolation protest outside the UN by a Tibetan activist. The episode featured panel debates with Democratic and Republican strategists, investigative reporting on transit crime, and interviews with affected ranchers facing government-created monument restrictions.

Key takeaways

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