This is absolutely a real deal — for Iran

This is the June 18, 2026, edition of “The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe” newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered straight to your inbox Monday through Friday.

Angelina Katsanis/Getty Images

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Knicks forward OG Anunoby at today’s championship ticker tape parade and victory rally, celebrating the 2026 NBA title.

JOE’S NOTE

“Versailles is not gold leaf,” Donald Trump said last night. “Versailles is the real deal.”

Versailles is also where the Germans agreed to pay massive reparations following World War I. Last night, America’s president signed his own unconditional surrender at Louis XIV’s palace. 

MS NOW’s David Rohde reports that Iran’s clerics are giddy with the favorable terms they received. 

$300 billion in U.S.-backed reconstruction funding. 

$100 billion in unfrozen funds. 

The lifting of all international sanctions. 

Trump’s radical shift to accepting Iran’s need for a nuclear project. 

Trump and JD Vance now treat Iran like Luxembourg, assuming for purposes of negotiations that it will act in good faith like any other normal country. 

Iran is not a normal country. It is the epicenter of international terrorism, and has been since 1979.

The Wall Street Journal predicts that Trump’s weakness will encourage Iran to demand even more concessions down the road. With Trump desperately working to avoid antagonizing Iran, the Journal rightly concludes that Tehran is now calling the shots. 

The people of Israel have been betrayed. 

Democracy protesters in Iran also feel betrayed. 

Republicans are rightly horrified. 

And Marco Rubio has grown as silent as a modern-day Greta Garbo.

But in Tehran, they’re loudly celebrating Trump’s historic collapse because they know the president is right about one thing: Versailles is the real deal. And the deal Trump signed there will come at a great cost to America and the world.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Mistakes are made. War is nasty.”

—President Donald Trump, dismissing questions about the deadly U.S. strike on a girls’ school in Iran on the first day of the war

STEVE RATTNER’S CHARTS

Inflation Up, Job Growth Steady

The Federal Reserve has two responsibilities: controlling inflation and maintaining full employment. On the inflation side, the news has not been good. On the other hand, job growth — which had been a noticeable weak spot in the economy — has shown surprising life. 

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