'Campaign ending decision': Conor McGregor blasts Donald Trump for saying Khabib is his favorite fighter



Former UFC champion Conor McGregor lashed out at former President Donald Trump over who the politician chose to call one of his favorite UFC fighters.

Trump appeared on a livestream with 23-year-old content creator Adin Ross, which spawned several viral clips including from a Tesla Cybertruck and the former president's iconic dance moves.

During a sit-down portion of the unorthodox interview, Ross asked the former president about his passion for mixed martial arts.

'I would have thought USA ONLY would be the mentality here.'

"I know you're a UFC fan; who are your favorite fighters?" Ross said.

"I think Khabib [Nurmagomedov] ... you know who Khabib is?" Trump replied. "Khabib was 29-0 ... but I don't think he ever lost a round. I think he was great."

Trump quickly recalled a story about meeting the now-retired fighter at UFC 302 in June 2024, where Nurmagomedov asked him about the Israel-Palestine war. Trump then revealed that the undefeated fighter also talked to him about the Russia-Ukraine war.

"I met Khabib, and [he said], 'You're the man who can stop the war,' the war with Ukraine and Russia."

"Because he knows there is people on both sides, with so many people dying on both sides," Trump continued. "We weren't talking about fighting, we were talking about a different kind of fighting, a much worse kind of fighting. He was very concerned about that whole thing."

While the unique interview was seen as a victory for Gen Z Trump supporters and provided a lot of entertainment, McGregor was extremely displeased with the 45th president's choice of fighters.

In a series of now-deleted posts on X, McGregor lambasted Trump for highlighting Nurmagomedov over American fighters.

"Campaign ending decision. A smelly fat mountain monkey from inbred mountains of Dagestan is your favorite UFC (AMERICAN COMPANY) fighter? Wow. Abysmal," McGregor wrote.

The Irishman also asserted that Trump is not actually a billionaire before scolding him over not being "USA ONLY."

"I was actually wrong. Couple hundred million he is worth. Not multi B. I would have thought USA ONLY would be the mentality here and what I would want to see out of my president, personally," McGregor said, according to BJPenn.com.

"Over all the American fighters that have backed him. It's a shocking decision. He was caught on the spot. That won't go unnoticed on the roster. This presidential race is very tight right now. More so now.”

McGregor then threw more insults at the retired Nurmagomedov with a since-deleted photo of him and his training partners in a hot tub.

"Trumps favorite fighter. here he is in a tiny tub with his fellow inbred pals in Dagestan. Can you spot him? Where's Khabib? Find Khabib," McGregor continued.

"To pick a retired inbred fighter from Dagestan Russia who has 3 main events only to his name is astounding."

The two fighters had an extremely volatile rivalry leading up to their fight at UFC 229 in 2018.

Not only did the McGregor and Nurmagomedov continuously exchange harsh words in press conferences, McGregor shocked fans when he threw a dolly into the window of a UFC bus that had Nurmagomedov and other fighters sitting on it.

Nurmagomedov went on to win the fight by a neck crank submission in the fourth round.

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'Take them all single-handed': Elon Musk cheers on Conor McGregor as fighter outlines his path to Irish presidency



Former two-division UFC champion Conor McGregor has teased plans to do more than criticize the leftist elements weakening and endangering the Emerald Isle. McGregor indicated he might be willing to step into the ring should the Irish desire a fighter for president.

South African billionaire Elon Musk is among those ostensibly keen on McGregor taking a shot at the title, telling the 35-year-old Irishman on X, "I think you could take them all single-handed. Not even fair."

McGregor, who recently became the subject of a hate speech investigation by Irish police after he condemned the stabbing of school children, detailed the Irish political field Monday as he sees it along with the gerontocrats populating it and his route to power.

The established opposition

"Potential competition if I run. Gerry, 78. Bertie. 75. Enda, 74. Each with unbreakable ties to their individual parties politics. Regardless of what the public outside of their parties feel," McGregor wrote on X. "These parties govern themselves vs govern the people."

— (@)

Gerry Adams previously served as president of the radical socialist political party Sinn Féin from 1983 until 2018. He also served as a Teachta Dála — member of the lower house of Irish parliament. He stood down from his post representing Louth in the last election.

A spokesman for Adams recently indicated he is not seeking a return to frontline politics, reported Exra.ie.

Bertie Ahern served both as Irish prime minister, also known as taoiseach, from 1997 to 2008, as well as a member of the lower parliament from 1977 to 2011. He led the Fianna Fáil through three coalition governments, but resigned in 2012 amidst an ethics scandal. However, in February, roughly five years after indicating he had presidential ambitions, he rejoined the party.

The Irish Times indicated that Ahern's return to the Fianna Fáil has fueled speculation about a 2025 presidential run.

Enda Kenny, another former taoiseach and multi-decade parliamentarian, served as the head of the Fine Gael, a progressive liberal party greatly supportive of the European Union whose censorious leader, Leo Varadkar, is the incumbent taoiseach.

The Irish Independent suggested last month there is speculation the Fine Gael might advance Kenny as their presidential candidate.

The path to victory

Days after welcoming his fourth child into the world, McGregor told Elon Musk he fancies his chances of winning but would "need to be nominated either by: at least 20 members of the Oireachtas; or at least four local authorities (AKA county councils) to run."

The Oireachtas is Ireland's bicameral parliament.

"Most (26) local authorities are county councils. There are also 3 city councils (Dublin, Galway, and Cork) and 2 councils that oversee a city and a county (Limerick and Waterford)," continued McGregor. "A process. Either way, I'd just be happy with absolute transparency and consultation to the public. Currently there is none. Not an iota."

McGregor condemned the practice of politicians making promises at election time then turning their backs on the populace as soon as the votes are counted.

"It's disgusting. Even opposition politics seems to me more about the attempt of gaining power vs seeking their change," wrote the fighter. "If those currently in power agreed to usher in all opposition stance on change it wouldn't be enough. It's power/greed, the aim."

According to McGregor, yet another "power swap," whereby ruling and opposition parties trade places, would amount to little improvement as it would simply mean only a different stripe of establishmentarians running the nation contrary to the wishes and good of the electorate.

"This is why I'd run, if I was to. To be a voice of the people that deserve to be heard. President of Ireland is a unique position to other countries but it would demand response to questioning," added McGregor.

Musk responded, "Sunlight is the best disinfectant. Well, I hope you are at least nominated. That would shake things up!"

— (@)

Populist concerns

The populist fighter's political engagement online appears to have increased significantly in recent weeks, in part due to the perception of detached leaders and grievous crimes committed by migrants.

For instance, following the Nov. 23 stabbing of three young children and their caregiver outside a primary school in Dublin by a man initially ordered deported, Mcgregor wrote, "Innocent children ruthlessly stabbed by a mentally deranged non-national in Dublin, Ireland today."

"There is grave danger among us in Ireland that should never be here in the first place, and there has been zero action done to support the public in any way, shape or form with this frightening fact," continued McGregor. "Make change or make way. Ireland for the victory. God bless those attacked today, we pray."

The Irish Times has already begun likening McGregor to former President Donald Trump.

Times columnist Fintan O'Toole suggested McGregor's brand fuses religious piety "with gangsta hedonism, macho-strut with family values, the old god of Irish-Catholicism with a gold-plated Mammon, bullying aggression with the promise of protection, chauvinistic nationalism with global celebrity, fame with notoriety."

"It's a very American blend – and a potentially heady cocktail in an Ireland with a disenfranchised Catholic right and a social infrastructure lagging far behind its population growth," added O'Toole.

McGregor posted an image of himself on Dec. 3, captioned, "Ireland, your President."

— (@)

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Irish police launch hate speech investigation into Conor McGregor after he condemned stabbing of schoolchildren



Irish police have launched an investigation into former two-division UFC champion Conor McGregor after he expressed outrage over the vicious Nov. 23 stabbing of three young children and their caregiver outside a primary school in Dublin.

According to the Sunday Times, assistant Garda Commissioner Justin Kelly is leading an Irish police investigation into whether McGregor has disseminated online hate speech.

What's the background?

Two little girls, ages 5 and 6, a 5-year-old boy, and the children's caregiver, a woman in her 30s, were stabbed by a suspect allegedly of Algerian origin outside Dublin primary school Gaelscoil Cholaiste Mhuire around 1:30 p.m. on Thursday.

Eyewitness Siobhán Kearney told the Irish Times she had heard "screaming" and "spotted a guy with a stabbing motion across the road."

"So I took across the road and there was fellas there and they pulled the guy off the children. There was a good few kids," said Kearney.

Caio Benício, a courier and father of two who happened to be motoring through the area on a moped at the time, noticed the attack under way, dismounted, and cracked the suspect over the head with his motorcycle helmet.

The 50-year-old suspect, whom Blaze News previously reported was arrested and deemed a "person of interest" by police, reportedly was left injured after passersby intervened.

According to the Times, the suspect arrived in Ireland in 2003 demanding asylum. His application was rejected and officials ordered his deportation, but he successfully challenged his removal and won residency rights. The suspect was arrested for possession of a knife last May.

Supt. Liam Geraghty claimed Thursday that investigators were "satisfied there is no terrorist link," reported the Guardian.

The 5-year-old girl the attacker repeatedly stabbed in the chest was still fighting for her life in a hospital with "catastrophic" injuries as of Saturday, reported the Independent.

The 6-year-old female victim remains in a hospital but is said to have suffered less serious injuries. The boy, age 5, was released from the hospital late last week.

The caregiver said to have used her body to shield the children during the savage attack was reportedly still in serious condition over the weekend, receiving treatment for multiple stab wounds to her abdomen and chest at Mater Hospital.

Fighting Irish

The attack sparked outrage across the Emerald Isle. In Dublin, rioters sparred with police and set numerous vehicles ablaze, including a bus and a tram.

Amidst the riots, police commissioner Drew Harris described the hooligans as a "complete lunatic faction driven by far-right ideology."

Irish justice minister Helen McEntee said that "the scenes we are witnessing this evening in our city centre cannot and will not be tolerated. A thuggish and manipulative element must not be allowed to use an appalling tragedy to wreak havoc."

McEntee stressed that police would scour around 6,000 of surveillance footage in hopes of identifying more outraged Irishmen to arrest. Forty-eight arrests had been made as of Sunday.

Irish President Michael Higgins expressed sympathy for the injured children and condemned the use of the attack "by groups with an agenda that attacks the principle of social inclusion."

Fighting words

McGregor did not mince words when responding online to news of the attack on Thursday but made clear he did not support the riots.

"Innocent children ruthlessly stabbed by a mentally deranged non-national in Dublin, Ireland today," he wrote just hours after the attack.

"There is grave danger among us in Ireland that should never be here in the first place, and there has been zero action done to support the public in any way, shape or form with this frightening fact," continued McGregor. "Make change or make way. Ireland for the victory. God bless those attacked today, we pray."

"Absolutely horrific scenes all day, my stomach is churning. With no action being taken at all during these ever more frequent events, like literally zero action taken whatsoever, how do we expect an end to this?" the fighter tweeted in another instance to his 10.3 million followers. "We need reform. WE NEED ACTION!"

His coach John Kavanagh later posed the question on X, "So what should happen with this demented scumbag who attacked women and kids today?"

McGregor wrote back, "Torture and death."

— (@)

Following the Thursday night riots, the fighter made clear he did not condone "any attacks on our first responders in their line of duty" or the "looting and the damaging of shops."

The Sunday Times reported that Micheál Martin, Irish deputy prime minister, called McGregor's remarks "disgraceful."

"Isolated voices like that and voices that essentially are inciting hate and to some degree incitement is unacceptable," said Martin.

McGregor responded, "Blame anyone but themselves. Typical. Worthless you are Michaél. Worthless and spineless!"

— (@)

Irish Labour Party politician Aodhán Ó Ríordáin told the Irish Sun, "You have shock jock people online whipping it up and you have online platforms purporting to be mainstream media outlets whipping it up, Conor McGregor whipping it up – it doesn't help."

Ríordáin added, "They all have to – I think – account for their actions and for their words."

The Telegraph indicated that leftist politician and Prime Minister Leo Varadkar would not comment directly on McGregor's remarks but stressed that new hate-speech laws should be implemented.

Although the timing of the investigation suggests McGregor's most recent comments are at issue, the mixed martial arts star has also ruffled leftist feathers in recent weeks with his criticism online of unchecked immigration and Irish politicians' various failings.

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