Democrats exposed through disturbing videos that could end their career

Chuck Schumer

The Democrat Party is in complete disarray. There’s no telling when they’ll become organized again.

And these Democrats were exposed through disturbing videos that could end their career.

Democrats Unleash Strikingly Similar Video Attacks Before Trump’s Big Speech

As President Donald Trump prepared to take the stage for his address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, three prominent Democratic lawmakers unleashed a trio of video broadsides that raised eyebrows for their uncanny resemblance. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ), and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) each posted clips to social media that seemed to follow an eerily familiar playbook, sparking chatter about coordination behind the scenes.

Schumer kicked things off with a fiery video on X, tearing into Trump over the persistent sting of high prices. “Sh*t that ain’t true. That’s what you just heard,” he declared, after rolling a snippet of Trump vowing to slash costs.

“Since day one of Donald Trump’s presidency, prices are not down, they’re up. Inflation is getting worse, not better. The prices of groceries, yes, housing, eggs, of essentials, is not getting better, it’s getting worse,” he charged, sidestepping any nod to the Biden-Harris administration’s role in the economic landscape.

The New York senator didn’t hold back, accusing Trump of twiddling his thumbs on the cost-of-living crisis. “Meanwhile, Donald Trump has done nothing — goose eggs — to lower prices for you. Instead, he’s pardoned violent criminals who savagely beat police officers on January 6. That’s an effing disgrace,” Schumer fumed.

He went on to paint a grim picture of Trump teaming up with Elon Musk to gut essential programs. “He’s letting Elon Musk take a chainsaw to vital government programs, and then, even worse, giving him access to Americans’ most sensitive data, social security numbers, tax returns, health care bills,” he warned.

Schumer kept the heat on, claiming Trump had axed “thousands of essential workers” who support veterans and battle global health threats like Ebola, while freezing funds for cancer research, education, and family farmers. “Why are they doing this?” he demanded, before supplying his own answer: they “are taking these vital services away from you for one reason only, so they can give tax breaks to their billionaires club.” He capped it off with a grim verdict: “Their plan is awful, simply awful: Billionaires win. Families lose. And that is the truth.”

Not to be outdone, Sen. Cory Booker fired off a video that echoed Schumer’s script with striking precision. “Sh*t that ain’t true,” he opened, mirroring his colleague’s punchy style. “That’s what you just saw. Since day one of Donald Trump’s presidency, prices are up, not down. Inflation is getting worse, not better. The prices of groceries — gas, housing, rent, eggs are all getting expensive.”

Booker’s rant followed the same path, slamming Trump over January 6 and alleging a Musk-led assault on critical services.

Then came Sen. Elizabeth Warren, whose own video felt like a carbon copy of the others. “Sh*t that ain’t true,” she began, sticking to what was starting to look like a party-line script. “Since day one of Donald Trump’s presidency, prices on inflation is getting worse. The cost of groceries, gas, housing, yeah, even eggs is getting higher. Meanwhile, Donald Trump has done nothing to lower costs for you. Instead, he’s pardoned violent criminals who beat police officers on January 6. He’s letting Elon Musk take a chainsaw literally to government programs that people need,” she charged, rounding out the trifecta of near-identical takedowns.

The synchronized attacks didn’t go unnoticed. Elon Musk jumped into the fray, reposting a cleverly edited video on X that showed all three lawmakers delivering their lines side by side.

The split-screen mashup made it crystal clear: these weren’t off-the-cuff rants but carefully rehearsed performances from a shared blueprint. “They are all actors reading a script,” Musk quipped, letting the visuals speak for themselves.

The barrage of cookie-cutter clips landed just hours before Trump’s congressional address, a speech that struck a chord with viewers. Declaring “America is back,” the president earned high marks from a wide swath of Americans, with polls showing strong approval for his message.

Against that backdrop, the Democrats’ matching video volleys stood out as a bold — and perhaps too obvious — attempt to steal the spotlight. Whether their unified front will sway hearts or just fuel skepticism remains to be seen.

Stay tuned to The Federalist Wire.