President Donald Trumpâs plan to accept a $400 million luxury jet from Qatar has triggered unexpected backlash from within his own base. Prominent MAGA personalities like Laura Loomer and Ben Shapiro are denouncing the plan, citing concerns about Qatarâs ties to groups like Hamas and its broader relationship with Iran, alongside other national security risks.
Lesser-known Trump fans spoke up on X, with a few expressing concerns about the Presidentâs safety. Others opposed accepting the gift not on any constitutional grounds, but because theyâre not fans of Qatar.
Laura Loomer, Ben Shapiro, and Mark Levin agree
Right-wing media personality Laura Loomer took a break from yelling âWOKE MARXIST POPEâ to speak out on Sunday on reports that Trump intends to accept what has been referred to as a âsky palace.â Loomer mentioned that sheâd take a bullet for the man (twice) but had to speak her truth.
âI have to call a spade a spade,â she wrote. âWe cannot accept a $400 million âgiftâ from jihadists in suits.â

âThe Qataris fund the same Iranian proxies in Hamas and Hezbollah who have murdered US Service Members. The same proxies that have worked with the Mexican cartels to get jihadists across our border. This is really going to be such a stain on the admin if this is true.â

Qatar is an Iranian ally and allowed senior Hamas officials in the capital of Doha until November 2024. They donât tend to count fans among pro-Israel Trump supporters. Fox News host Mark Levin agreed with Loomer, quote-tweeting her post with the word âDitto.â He may have gone against his network in doing so, considering the networkâs X account repeatedly posted President Trumpâs denials of wrongdoing.
Meanwhile, Daily Wire host Ben Shapiro dedicated an episode of his podcast to opposing Trumpâs plan. Right-wing political commentator Ian Miles Cheong posted a clip from this episode without offering his own opinion.
âTaking sacks of goodies from people who support Hamas, Muslim Brotherhood, Al Jazeera, all the restâthatâs not America first,â said Shapiro. âLike, please define America First in a way that says you should take sacks of cash from the Qatari royals, who are behind Al Jazeera.â
âIf you want President Trump to succeed, this kind of skeezy stuff needs to stop.â
âI miss the old Trumpâ
The big names werenât the only ones feeling a strain on the limits of their loyalty to Trump. While crowds of MAGA accounts defended the President, a few expressed that they are not 100 percent on board. Most of this dissent centered on their distrust of Qatar, leaning more into the national security concerns than the constitutional ones.
âI donât trust Iran and I donât trust Hamas,â wrote @jessalanfields. âI donât trust their ally, Qatar, who has given Hamas nearly $2 billion.â

âAnd I donât want our President anywhere near an airplane originating in Qatarâmuch less flying on it regularly. The national security implications are grave.â
Pro-Trump lawyer Marina Medvin, who defended January 6 defendants, agreed.
âI miss the old Trump, the one that was cautious of and critical of Qatar,â she said.

Some fans canât get their heads around this particular contradiction. One MAGA user pointed to Rep. Ilhan Omarâs (D-MN) acceptance of a trip to Qatar in 2023 to attend the World Cup, which led some conservatives to claim that Omar alone must be a Qatari asset.
âWhy would Qatar both fund Ilhan Omar and gift a $400 million plane to President Trump?â asked @EYakoby. âThe Qataris are Jihadists in fancy suits.â

Would it be legal for Trump to accept the Qatari jet gift?
Some might remember the hullabaloo over the Emoluments Clause of the U.S. Constitution during Trumpâs first term. Back then, Democrats were outraged that he was profiting by hosting world leaders in his hotels. Those profits likely added up to less than $400 million and were not a direct gift like the sky palace would be.
This part of the Constitution prohibits federal officials from accepting anything of value from foreign governments without the approval of Congress. The current Congress has not approved of accepting the plane, and Trumpâs defense for accepting it anyway boiled down to, âWhy not?â
âI would never be one to turn down that kind of an offer,â he said to reporters. âI mean, I could be a stupid person say, âNo, we donât want a free, very expensive airplane.â But it wasâI thought it was a great gesture.â
He further claimed that the gift would be to the U.S. Department of Defense, not to him personally. This may be undermined by his additional claim that it would be decommissioned and given to a presidential library after his second term is up. Constitutional scholars do not appear satisfied by Trumpâs explanations.
âThis is a classic example of what the founders worried about,â University of Minnesota law professor and former White House ethics chief Richard Painter told AP News. âBut I donât think the founders anticipated it would get this bad.â
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