RawStory

2024 Elections

Police say there is 'no credibility' to report of explosives near Trump's New York rally

The is "no credibility" to reports that explosives were found near the site of former President Donald Trump's Long Island rally, New York police told Raw Story on Wednesday.

The claim that of explosives found in a car parked near Trump's Uniondale venue — picked up by the Daily Mail Wednesday morning — appears originate with an X post from former investigative reporter James Lalino, who cited anonymous sources within the Nassau County Police Department.

Keep reading... Show less

Mike Johnson blames Dem rhetoric for 'unstable' gunmen: 'It makes them do crazy things'

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) blamed Democrats for "unstable" gunmen who attempted to assassinate former President Donald Trump.

At a press conference on Wednesday, Johnson addressed Sunday's attempt on Trump's life.

Keep reading... Show less

'My God!' Dem lawmaker levels Byron Donalds for casting blame for violence away from Trump

A Democratic lawmaker destroyed claims by Republican Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida blaming Democrats for another apparent assassination attempt against Donald Trump.

CNN's Kate Bolduan interviewed Donalds on Tuesday morning, when he claimed that "radical elements in the Democrat Party" were responsible for the two apparent attempts on Trump's life because they had characterized his right-wing agenda as extremist, and the following day she asked Democratic Rep. Dan Kildee of Michigan to comment.

Keep reading... Show less

Melania Trump explains why she's proud of her 'nude modeling work'

Melania Trump is outraged that the press shamed her for nude photos nearly a decade ago because her fashion photo shoots for Max Magazine and Sports Illustrated were just like Michelangelo's David, the former first lady explained Wednesday.

Art.

Keep reading... Show less

'Dark' Trump rhetoric is 'playing roulette with real human beings': Financial Times column

Financial Times columnist Edward Luce believes that former President Donald Trump and Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) are making explicit ethnonationalism the center of their campaign -- and he's not sure that it's a losing bet.

In his latest column, Luce outlines how Trump and Vance have knowingly lied about Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio as a means of distracting the public from Trump's disastrous debate performance and forcing the American media to cover immigration, which polls show is Trump's strongest issue.

Keep reading... Show less

'We got millions and millions more votes': Trump mocks conspiracy theorist label

As both presidential candidates amp up their efforts to win over battleground state voters, former President Donald Trump made another stop in Michigan Tuesday, hosting a town hall in Flint alongside Arkansas Gov. and former Trump press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

The town hall marked Trump’s first campaign appearance since the FBI began investigating a possible second assassination attempt against the former president. His running mate, U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), hosted another campaign event in Sparta earlier in the day where he railed against Democrats for the shooting in Pennsylvania as well the incident in Florida on Sunday.

Keep reading... Show less

J.D. Vance shared pet-eating claims after being told 'point blank' they were lies: report

A representative for J.D. Vance was told "point blank" that the Republican vice presidential nominee's claims about Haitian immigrants in Ohio were not true, but he continued to smear them anyway as bomb threats were called in to local schools and government offices.

The Republican senator posted about the rumors on X, where he's got 1.9 million followers, and he did not delete the post even after one of his staffers called Springfield city manager Bryan Heck on the morning of Sept. 9 to ask whether Haitian immigrants were stealing and eating cats and dogs, as other social media users had alleged, reported the Wall Street Journal.

Keep reading... Show less

Harris nets another high-powered slate of Republican endorsements

If Republican presidential candidates have traditionally been seen as more closely aligned with the U.S. national security establishment — the military, the intelligence community, foreign policy experts — it’s a run that’s come to an abrupt halt in 2024.

This fact was brought home yet again today in an announcement from the Harris-Walz campaign that more than 100 Republican former national security and foreign policy officials who served in senior roles in multiple presidential administrations and in Congress are endorsing Vice President Harris for President.

Keep reading... Show less

Conservative fact-checked over Trump threats: His 'own campaign' wants him to shut up

J.D. Vance has portrayed a second apparent assassination attempt against Donald Trump as an attempt to silence the Republican nominee, and CNN panelists debated whether that was accurate.

The U.S. Secret Service chased an armed man from a hiding place Sunday near the south Florida golf course where Trump had been playing a round, and both he and his running mate have blamed Democrats for inciting that incident and another apparent assassination attempt in July.

Keep reading... Show less

Tim Walz tells NC crowd to ‘ditch’ Trump, fight for democracy

Six days after Kamala Harris drew large, enthusiastic crowds in Charlotte and Greensboro, Governor Tim Walz brought the campaign to Asheville in hopes of keeping the momentum high in the final 49 days of the 2024 presidential campaign.

The Democratic nominee for vice president told the audience while many people were impressed by Harris’ debate performance over Donald Trump, they should not be surprised that a woman who was an attorney general of the largest state in the country, a United States senator, and vice president of the United States was prepared for this moment in history.

Keep reading... Show less

'You are the cancer': Swing state election official says he has PTSD from MAGA threats

One public employee tasked with overseeing elections in a battleground state's most populous county has post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and is soon leaving his profession due to constant death threats from former President Donald Trump's supporters.

A recent article in the New Yorker reported on the new documentary "Denial," which is about how MAGA-fueled conspiracy theories about the 2020 election have impacted the lives of election workers. The film is shown from the perspective of Maricopa County, Arizona supervisor Bill Gates — a lifelong Republican and Federalist Society member who nonetheless became a prime target of Trump supporters for certifying election results that led to President Joe Biden narrowly winning the Grand Canyon State in 2020.

Keep reading... Show less

35 church leaders endorse South Dakota abortion-rights ballot measure

A coalition of Christian clergy members announced support Tuesday for a ballot measure that would establish the right to an abortion in the South Dakota constitution.

The 35 faith leaders are from five Christian denominations — the United Methodist Church, the Presbyterian Church USA, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Episcopal Church and the United Church of Christ.

Keep reading... Show less

TX GOP sought election advantage with failed effort to shutter college voting locations

Earlier this month, Tarrant County Judge Tim O’Hare proposed eliminating voting locations at some colleges because of their low turnout and to save costs.

Critics pointed to the thousands of students who used the locations in the past — many of whom favored liberal-leaning candidates — and accused O’Hare of wanting to suppress votes for his party’s benefit. O’Hare denied it and said college campuses were uninviting to older voters and had limited parking. Students could just go to another nearby location, he said.

Keep reading... Show less