RawStory

2024 Elections

'A wonderful disaster': Critics react with glee to J.D. Vance's latest CNN interview

Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) on Friday went on CNN to do an interview that was marred by apparent technical glitches and also multiple evasive answers on Vance's part when it comes to former President Donald Trump's views on abortion.

Critics of the Ohio senator and Republican vice-presidential nominee eagerly pounced on what they claimed was a train wreck interview.

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'Trying to lose': Ex-GOP insider says Trump sabotaging himself to test followers' loyalty

Donald Trump doesn't even seem like he wants to win re-election anymore, according to a political insider.

The former president and Republican nominee told reporters that he thought Florida's current six-week abortion ban was "too short," which has infuriated many fellow conservatives, and former GOP congressional staffer Maura Gillespie told CNN that shows Trump isn't really a serious candidate.

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J.D. Vance refuses to apologize for mocking then-teen's mortally embarrassing moment

Warning: this story involves a discussion about someone considering taking their own life. If you or a loved one is experiencing this, please consider contacting the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline.

J.D. Vance refused to apologize for resurrecting an ancient internet meme that had caused a then-teen girl to consider taking her own life.

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'Frightened' Trump's IVF for all proposal brutally skewered by analyst on Morning Joe

Reacting to Donald Trump's latest position on abortion and his out-of-the-blue proposals to either have the government pay for in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatments or force insurance companies to pay for them, a political analyst on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" ridiculed his motivations.

In a clip shared on Friday morning, Trump was seen stating, "I'm announcing today in a major statement that under the Trump administration, your government will pay for or your insurance company will be mandated to pay for all costs associated with IVF treatment, fertilization for women."

Speaking with MSNBC host Willie Geist, who prompted his guest by calling the Trump campaign "flailing," Anand Giridharadas suggested Trump is running scared.

ALSO READ: The real reason corporate media won't cover Trump's attacks on democracy

"Look, I mean, for millions of American families, IVF stands for in vitro fertilization. For Donald Trump right now, it stands for, 'I'm very frightened.'" he joked.

"He is something we don't normally see: scared, defensive," he continued. "He's on his back foot, right? Think about since 2015, you and I have had this conversation in various forms, how many of those years was Donald Trump on the back foot, defensive, and frightened? He is now."

"I think the reason is, what happened with IVF, this started with Dobbs and abortion," he elaborated. "What happened with IVF is illuminating. I think it was the American people starting to realize that these things never stop with the initial thing, right? IVF was sort of falling down the slippery slope from Dobbs. You first come for abortion, and then there were murmurs of IVF."

Watch below or at the link.

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'Make the other side die': Michigan Trump fan makes ominous warning ahead of election

A Trump supporter in Michigan this week issued an ominous warning about what will happen should his candidate not prevail in the upcoming election.

In an interview with Politico, 62-year-old Trump supporter Richard McLeod, who in the past had been a militia member, suggested mass violence was in the offing if the election didn't go as he hoped.

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'The behavior is grotesque': MSNBC host pummels Trump World over war with cemetery

On Friday morning, MSNBC "Morning Joe" co-host Willie Geist took aim at Donald Trump and his campaign officials for their continuing attacks on officials at Arlington National Cemetery following the fracas which occurred during a controversial campaign photo-op.

Noting that Trump campaign officials have ramped up attacks on officials who have called out and criticized the former president for breaking the rules, Geist, who has been off the air all week, had a few things to say.

"At the end of the day, the behavior is grotesque," he began. "Ask yourself, knowing what we know about Donald Trump for these last ten years at least, go back further if you want, if you believe an employee at Arlington National Cemetery, sacred ground of the United States, trying to enforce rules that restrict video and political ads inside a cemetery, or Donald Trump and his campaign and the people who are saying, that this person was mentally ill, throwing that out there, that they were having some kind of a mental health episode, and not just doing his or her job."

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'Today's the day he lost': Georgia Republicans furious at Trump's latest comments

Donald Trump's latest comments on reproductive rights have irritated some fellow Republicans.

The former president and current GOP nominee told NBC News that he believes the six-week abortion ban in his home state of Florida was "too short," and Republicans in the swing state just north of there grumbled about his comments, reported the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

“This is completely and utterly grotesque and indefensible,” said Cole Muzio, head of the Georgia anti-abortion group Frontline Policy Council.

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'Crossings are down': CNN panelist confronts GOP strategist on Harris' border record

CNN's Kate Bedingfield Friday morning smacked down a Republican strategist's claims that border security would be a liability for Kamala Harris.

The vice president gave her first sit-down interview since accepting the Democratic Party nomination, and she told CNN's Dana Bash that she intended to revive the border security bill that president Joe Biden helped draft with conservative Republicans but was eventually smothered by Donald Trump and his House allies.

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'Particularly risky' Trump strategy casts cloud over his electability: New York Times

As election day looms closer and closer, Donald Trump has ramped up his attacks on Vice President Kamala Harris while sinking lower and lower with the type of attacks he is deploying against his Democratic opponent which, in turn, is raising questions whether he going too far or has already reached that point.

According to a report from the New York Times, the former president is running a "particularly risky" strategy of attacks that could come back to haunt him with voters due to the growing coarseness of his rhetoric and his use of degrading memes of Harris on his Truth Social account.

As the Times reports, "Trump has found a particularly complicated and risky target for his trademark brand of transgression" that could turn off even more women voters that could complicate his re-election hopes."

ALSO READ: The real reason corporate media won't cover Trump's attacks on democracy

As the Times' Ken Bensinger, Karen Yourish and Michael Gold wrote, Trump's "decision to repost a string of sexually and racially charged broadsides in recent weeks suggests that he has turned up the dial when it comes to pure vulgarity and crudeness."

That report adds, "That eagerness to offend is likely to receive increased scrutiny as the election enters its final stretch. With both major parties battling for female and moderate swing-state voters, Mr. Trump could potentially alienate an undecided audience uncomfortable with his coarse rhetoric."

Of note are the terms the former president is using to go after his opponent, which have included, "wack job, "communist," “dumb as a rock," “real garbage," “a bum," and, as the Times is reporting, "employing a phrase he applies almost exclusively to women, 'nasty.'"

The report does point out that the former president is once again using his account on X, formerly known as Twitter, but has saved his most vicious attacks for his Truth Social platform where he has a more sympathetic audience.

You can read more here.

Heritage Foundation alleges systemic election fraud in survey sent to Indiana voters

A survey sent to Noblesville area voters from a national conservative think tank contends election fraud is on the rise as part of illegal attempts to steal elections.

The D.C.-based Heritage Foundation also claims to be nonpartisan, though its website highlights conservative views numerous times. The survey and two-page letter also include inflammatory language such as “immigrant invasion,” “leftists” and “radical media.” The organization is the key architect behind Project 2025, a controversial blueprint of conservative policies that includes eliminating the Department of Education and reforming several critical federal agencies.

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'Explosive path': Experts say 'expensive' Trump tax plan will add $5.8 trillion to deficit

Donald Trump's tax plan for a second potential term as president would be much more expensive than the one proposed by Vice President Kamala Harris, according to experts.

CBS Friday published an analysis of the presidential candidates' positions on taxes, finding that "the plans emerging from rivals Kamala Harris and Donald Trump could affect voters' paychecks in very different ways."

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Harris says in first interview U.S. ready to turn page on Trump

Kamala Harris declared Thursday that Americans are ready to turn the page on Donald Trump as she reached out to centrist voters in her first interview since her dramatic entry into November's presidential election.

The 59-year-old Democrat insisted on CNN that she would be tough on illegal immigration and support controversial oil and gas fracking -- while sticking to her liberal background by pledging a fairer economy.

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Evangelical Christians all in for Trump in Georgia

Churches dot the green hills of Rabun County, Georgia, where American flags flutter and God is everything -- but Donald Trump is not far behind.

In the southern battleground state, the faithful are well aware that the Republican former president is hardly a model Christian.

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