The Note: Trump's mean tweets shrink presidency

Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough responded to Trump's attacks.

— -- WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

  • President Trump ... yes, the president ... tweeted Thursday attacking "Morning Joe" hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough, which earned him criticism from Democrats and Republicans alike and ultimately distracted from his own message and agenda.
  • Scarborough and Brzezinski responded on "Morning Joe": "We're OK. The country is not," Scarborough said. "He attacks women because he fears women." Brzezinski said, "It's been fascinating and frightening and really sad for our country." The two also co-penned a Washington Post op-ed, in which they deny Trumps's claim that Brzezinski was "bleeding badly" and that the president had rejected their requests to join him at Mar-a-Lago.
  • Kellyanne Conway on "Good Morning America" said she won't endorse Trump's attacks but endorses "the president's right to fight back when he is being mercilessly attacked and when the air waves are filled with raw sewage about him and his fitness for office." Conway also seemed to catch herself, "George, that the toxicity both way -- coming to the president is terrible."
  • The Trump travel ban gets its first court challenge from Hawaii, which is questioning the administration's definition of what it means to be in a close familial relationship.
  • Another deadline broken: Republicans are hung up on health care as Congress leaves Washington today for a week, but expect lawmakers to face their constituents in town halls.
  • THE HEALTH CARE OPPOSITION MOBILIZES

    Republicans head home and they'll likely find the "resistance" waiting. On a call Thursday night, leaders from President Obama's former political group told volunteers to stay "vigilant" on health care during the Independence Day recess. They warned those listening that while on break, Republican lawmakers may try to make tweaks, changes and keep working the bill. The bill, that if passed, would undo the single biggest part of Obama's legislative legacy. "Over the course of the next week our main task is to communicate that those side deals are just not going to fly. This bill is fundamentally broken and cannot be salvaged," Jack Shapiro, director of policy and campaigns at the newly re-energized Organizing for Action, said on the call. OFA had been out of the public eye for most the 2016 campaign but, in the past few months, has been lending institutional knowledge and organizing help to groups and issues on the left. Shapiro told activists to be ready to mobilize, keep calling Senate offices and look out for town halls. "We cannot let this bill go through and so we are going to pull out all the stops to make sure that it doesn't," he added. All signs point to plenty of fireworks this Fourth, ABC News' MaryAlice Parks writes.

    NEED TO READ with ABC News' Daksha Sthipam

    CBO: 35-percent drop in Medicaid spending by 2036 under GOP health bill. The finding came in an additional analysis, requested by Democrats, released Thursday after Monday's comprehensive review of the plan. http://abcn.ws/2u47Gp2

    WHO'S TWEETING?

    @meridithmcgraw: 3 Female GOP Senators needed for healthcare vote on Trump tweet: Capito: "Distasteful" Collins: "This has to stop." Murkowski: "Stop it!"

    @Selenalarson: Trump's offensive tweets don't get him kicked off Twitter. @sfiegerman explains why http://cnnmon.ie/2tuhonD

    @LindseyGrahamSC: Mr. President, your tweet was beneath the office and represents what is wrong with American politics, not the greatness of America.

    @rickklein: "He fights fire with fire," Sarah Sanders says.

    @shaneharris: New: GOP operative sought Clinton emails from Russian hackers, implied he was working with Mike Flynn. http://on.wsj.com/2trcaZk

    The Note is a daily ABC News feature that highlights the key political moments of the day ahead. Please check back Monday for the latest.