Cory Booker just called Trump a name that will have him red with rage

cory booker

Booker is losing his mind once again. He’s always good for an overdramatic soundbite.

And Cory Booker just called Trump a name that will have him red with rage.

In the swamps of cable news, Democrat Sen. Cory Booker delivered yet another unhinged rant that perfectly captures the left’s complete detachment from reality.

On MS NOW’s “The Briefing,” the New Jersey senator unleashed a tirade accusing President Donald Trump of being the “most corrupt president in American history.”

This isn’t just political theater—it’s the latest example of elite Democrats projecting their own swampy dealings onto the one leader actually fighting to drain it.

Booker’s comments drip with the same hysterical elitism that voters rejected in 2024. While everyday Americans celebrate a president who puts their interests first, Washington insiders like Booker can’t handle a commander-in-chief who refuses to play by their corrupt rules.

The desperation is palpable as they watch their power slip away.

The senator didn’t stop at wild accusations. He painted a cartoonish picture of the Trump administration filled with schemes and ego monuments, all while ignoring the real scandals that plagued the previous regime.

From shady foreign business deals to weaponized federal agencies, the Biden years set new standards for institutional rot that Booker and his allies conveniently forget.

“What President Trump is doing is a moral outrage from his corruption, his crypto schemes, his ballroom, the monuments to his ego, to all the kleptocracy he’s doing and many of the incompetent people he’s putting in very important places,” Booker stated.

This over-the-top language reveals more about Booker’s mindset than Trump’s record. The American people see through it. They remember the border chaos, inflation crushing family budgets, and endless foreign entanglements under Democrat leadership.

Trump’s focus on energy independence, secure borders, and economic strength stands in stark contrast to the failures Booker’s party left behind.

Booker then shifted to gossip about private conversations among the powerful. He suggested that many quietly share his outrage but lack the courage to speak publicly.

This admission exposes the insular bubble of D.C. elites who think their whispered complaints represent the nation.

In reality, millions of working-class voters across the heartland continue to stand firmly with President Trump.

“Now, it’s not just a democratic thing that believes that many of us have private conversations with folks who will express their disdain, their outrage in private, but do nothing in public,” Booker continued.

The irony runs thick here. For years, Democrats engaged in public virtue-signaling while their private actions told a different story—whether it was Hunter Biden’s laptop, Big Tech censorship, or endless spending sprees that enriched connected insiders.

Now they lecture Republicans about courage while hiding behind media allies.