RawStory

2024 Elections

'I'm not trying to be rude': Sarah Sanders says Liz Cheney 'in the minority' on Jan. 6

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders (R) defended former President Donald Trump's Jan. 6 attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election by claiming that Americans who opposed his effort were "in the minority."

During a Sunday interview on ABC's This Week program, host Jonathan Karl told Sanders that former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) was supporting the Democratic presidential nominee because she believed Trump was "unfit for office."

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Ken Paxton sues Texas county to block voter registration efforts

This coverage is made possible through Votebeat, a nonpartisan news organization covering local election administration and voting access. Sign up for Votebeat Texas’ free newsletters here.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing Travis County to block an effort to register more voters before the November election.

Paxton's lawsuit follows a decision by the Travis County commissioners to hire Civic Government Solutions to contact non-registered county residents and encourage them to register. Travis County includes Austin.

"We just thought it was nice thing to do," said Ann Howard, a Travis County Commissioner at The Texas Tribune Festival shortly after news of the lawsuit was made public.

Paxton, in a statement, called the decision illegal.

“Travis County has blatantly violated Texas law by paying partisan actors to conduct unlawful identification efforts to track down people who are not registered to vote,” Paxton said. “Programs like this invite fraud and reduce public trust in our elections. We will stop them and any other county considering such programs.”

A spokesperson for the county said the commissioners stood by their decision.

“Travis County is committed to encouraging voter participation and we are proud of our outreach efforts that achieve higher voter registration numbers," said spokesperson Hector Nieto. "We remain steadfast in our responsibility to uphold the integrity of the voter registration process while ensuring that every eligible person has the opportunity to exercise their right to vote. It is disappointing that any statewide elected official would prefer to sow distrust and discourage participation in the electoral process.”

Paxton took a similar step earlier this week when he sued Bexar County, which includes San Antonio, the state's second most populous city. And last month, Harris County, the state's most populous, stopped short of taking similar steps.

Jeremy Smith, the CEO of Civic Government Solutions, denied being a partisan organization, a charge made by Paxton.

"The company is not partisan at all, the company's bylaws and mission and fiduciary responsibilities are all expressly nonpartisan," Smith told The Texas Tribune Friday. "All of our contracts, 100% of them, are nonpartisan. It is written in. We are under restrictions and obligations to prove that and maintain that and provide that data for accountability back to all of our clients.""As a general matter, these are purely nonpartisan efforts."

Harris, Bexar and Travis counties are all Democratic strongholds in a reliably Republican state. The lawsuits are part of a series of steps both Paxton and Gov. Greg Abbott — both Republicans — have taken in recent weeks to "safeguard Texans’ sacred right to vote." Late last month, Abbott announced the state had removed roughly a million people from its voter rolls since he signed a legislative overhaul of election laws in 2021. However, election experts cautioned that both federal and state law already required regular voter roll maintenance, and that Abbott's comments could be used to undermine trust in elections.

Speaking at The Texas Tribune Festival, chief executives of three of the state’s biggest counties defended their actions to register voters after Attorney General Ken Paxton brought suits against Bexar and Travis counties this week.

“Paxton does this every time,” said Travis County Judge Andy Brown about the attorney general’s suit against the county’s efforts to register voters ahead of the election. Brown added that county officials should do all they can to register voters — especially in a state where people can not register to vote online.

Bexar County Judge Peter Sakai said he decided to implement the voter registration program because voter turnout has been low in the area he serves, which includes the city of San Antonio.

“I want to make it clear that this effort is not touching the voting ballot. We're not touching the election process. All we want to do is register voters,” he said. Sakai said he is ready to defend the county’s position to go forward with the voter registration program adding “we are on legal ground.”

Paxton had threatened to also sue Harris County, but Judge Lina Hidalgo said that the county might not go forward with the program anymore because time is running out to register voters.

“We'd have to see, would it even be possible for folks to get registered before the deadline?” she said.

U.S. Rep. Greg Casar, D-Austin, discussed the letter during a panel discussion at The Texas Tribune Festival with MSNBC’s Katie Phang. He said the DOJ should be more aggressive in investigating voter suppression during this election season instead of waiting until after Election Day.

“[Paxton] basically saying I don't want new folks, people who are U.S. citizens, to get a chance to vote,” Casar said. “It's just ridiculous.”

The deadline to register to vote is Oct. 7.

Natalia Contreras, Berenice Garcia and Juan Salinas II contributed.

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Conservative groups step up push for more citizenship checks on Arizona voters

This article was originally published by Votebeat, a nonprofit news organization covering local election administration and voting access.

Conservative groups want a federal judge to force Arizona counties to further investigate the status of voters who have not provided documented proof of citizenship.

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'You never take responsibility': Debate questions released 'to hold Trump accountable'

The Philadelphia Inquirer Editorial Board this weekend published an op-ed that includes a list of debate questions the editors say is the only possible way for the moderators "to hold [Donald] Trump accountable."

"Given his appalling record, Trump has no business being on a presidential debate stage, let alone one in the shadows of Independence Hall," but since the debate against 2024 Democratic nominee Kamala Harris is two days away, and "roughly two months to go in what is expected to be a close election, voters need the media and debate moderators to treat Trump as the serious threat he is to the future of the country and the free world," the board writes.

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Fox News hosts flip out on Kamala Harris for visiting 'meanest spice shop in the world'

Fox News hosts lashed out at Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris after she visited a Pennsylvania spice shop that called out the "risks" associated with electing Republicans.

"Vice President Harris is hunkering down in Pittsburgh as she pushes for unity while visiting a spice shop known for mocking Republicans," Fox News host Will Cain announced on Sunday's edition of Fox & Friends.

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Tim Walz slams J.D. Vance on school shootings

WASHINGTON — Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz Saturday night touted his and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris’ advocacy for LGBTQ rights in a keynote address he delivered at the Human Rights Campaign’s annual gala — and also criticized comments by his GOP opponent Sen. J.D. Vance that school shootings are a “fact of life.”

“It’s a fact of life, some people are gay,” Walz said in his remarks. “But you know what’s not a fact of life? That our children need to be shot dead in schools.” In a Wednesday school shooting in Georgia at Apalachee High School, two students and two teachers were killed.

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MSNBC host blows up on Trump's ominous new threat targeting poll workers

Reacting to a Donald Trump posting on Truth Social late Saturday where the former president issued a threat aimed at election poll workers, a furious Michael Steele hammered the ex-president for threatening people just trying to do their jobs.

The co-host of MSNBC's "The Weekend," started the segment by reading Trump's post while explaining normally they refuse to repeat what he has to say on social media.

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If Trump loses 'MAGA has nowhere to go but down': conservative columnist

Should Donald Trump go down to defeat in November in his bid for a second presidential term, that will, in all likelihood, be the death knell for the MAGA movement he began nine years ago.

That is the opinion of conservative David French in his column for the New York Times on Sunday, where he suggests there is ample evidence that the avid followers of the former president are so entrenched in their belief in him that they have no room to embrace an heir apparent for the 78-year-old Trump.

In his column, he bluntly stated "attempts to mimic Trump succeed in Republican primaries and deep red jurisdictions, but they fail in swing states and purple districts," before adding, "Trump is MAGA’s most popular figure, and if he loses, then MAGA has nowhere to go but down."

ALSO READ: Buckle up: Win or lose, Trump promises potential scenarios of violence

As he pointed out, the former president selected Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) as his running mate in 2024, but he has failed to catch fire with voters, and that a broad array of MAGA-like candidates including Arizona's Kari Lake, Georgia's Herschel Walker and Pennsylvania's Doug Mastriano all suffered defeats in 2022 — and the prospects for far-right candidates in 2024 are not looking any better.

"Trump is peak MAGA, and even peak MAGA hasn’t been able to achieve Mitt Romney’s share of the 2012 popular vote. Stronger turnout masked this reality, but Trump has never achieved even 47 percent of the total votes cast," he pointed out before adding, "I’m under no illusions that defeating Trump will resurrect Ronald Reagan’s Republican Party — or John McCain’s or Mitt Romney’s. I’m also under no illusions about the fate of Never Trumpers in a post-Trump G.O.P."

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Observers erupt as ex-president caught 'threatening the voters' at his rally

Donald Trump made a claim at his rally on Saturday that had people worrying about what he meant.

Trump, who spoke in Mosinee, Wisconsin, was called out by CNN for a "lie" about transgender kids. But he also made another statement that caught the attention of political observers on social media, including actress Bette Midler.

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Major GOP figure's endorsement of Harris seen as 'massive signal' to undecided voters

A major figure in the GOP just sent a "massive signal" to undecided voters that Vice President Kamala Harris is their choice, a former Barack Obama aide said on Saturday.

Democratic political commentator Van Jones, a frequent guest on CNN, appeared on the network over the weekend to discuss the state of the presidential race and the upcoming debate during which Harris is set to face off against Donald Trump. Jones appeared alongside GOP operative Scott Jennings.

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'It's a lie': Trump's 'own campaign' failed to substantiate ex-president's new rally claim

Donald Trump's own presidential campaign has failed to substantiate the former president's Saturday rally claim about children and schools, according to CNN, which deemed the statement a "lie."

Trump recently spoke at a Moms for Liberty event where the former president made an eye-popping claim about transgender kids.

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Trump issues 'cease and desist' against any Democrat engaging in election 'skullduggery'

Donald Trump on Saturday promised that, if he were to win the 2024 presidential election, he would come down hard on anyone who engaged in election interference.

Trump, who himself has been criminally charged with election subversion in D.C. and in Georgia, took to his own social media network, Truth Social, to condemn the practice as it pertains to Democrats.

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'Yikes': Critics pounce on Trump's multiple verbal 'misfires' at Wisconsin rally

Donald Trump has in the past ridiculed President Joe Biden for misspeaking, but on Saturday the former president became the one who was subject to mockery after making numerous verbal slip-ups at his Wisconsin rally.

Trump over the weekend spoke at a rally in Mosinee, Wisconsin, where he at one point suggested that people in their 80s are too old to be able to be held accountable for documents they have signed. Trump is 78, and running for a four-year presidential term.

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