RawStory

2024 Elections

Trump shares statement from social media critic saying ex-president is 'going to prison'

Donald Trump amplified another Truth Social user taking potshots at the former president after he was indicted again in the federal election interference case.

Special counsel Jack Smith filed a superseding indictment Tuesday that trims some of the allegations to get around the U.S. Supreme Court's immunity ruling but keeps all four charges initially brought against the ex-president, and Trump reposted a supportive message posted on X by new ally Nicole Shanahan.

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'Very brilliant move': Legal expert says Jack Smith just made Judge Chutkan's job easier

During an appearance on "Morning Joe" MSNBC legal analyst Danny Cevallos applauded the effort special counsel Jack Smith put into going before a grand jury and getting a superseding indictment against Donald Trump related to the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Speaking with fill-in hosts Jonathan Lemire and Katty Kay, Cevallos explained that Smith trimmed down his charges against the former president which will make it harder for the conservative Supreme Court to intercede on his behalf.

Asked to "walk us through what happens next," Cevallos explained, "Normally a superseding indictment is something that strikes fear into the heart of a criminal attorney like me. It usually means that government has found more defendants or they've found more bad evidence and are charging more crimes. It's rare that you have a superseding indictment that reduces information."

ALSO READ: Trump is losing his audience

"Ultimately the only thing I care about is the counts, and all four counts remain," he pointed out. "That means if the defendant is convicted the sentencing guidelines will be exactly the same. All Jack Smith's team has done is taken a look at the indictment and said 'What should we remove that insulates us?' And, yes, they removed references to Trump's attempts to subvert the DOJ and maybe install a new acting attorney general, but they keep in language about vice president Pence, which signals to me that Jack Smith's team is feeling very confident."

"They've kept all four counts and they're keeping in conduct and the Mike Pence conduct is significant because the Supreme Court suggested that this at least was entitled to the presumption of immunity," he added. "So Jack Smith is signaling that even conduct that may be entitled to a presumption of immunity, it is full steam ahead. They are not afraid of the district court and any possible hearing; they are going forward with these counts."

"So as much as, yes, this indictment has been, I guess, reduced in length, everything that matters is still in it," he continued. "This is a strategic, I think a very brilliant move to keep this indictment alive, to head off any problems at the pass before Judge Tanya Chutkan has to hold a hearing making, I think, her job even easier."

Watch below or at the link.

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'No evidence whatsoever': Trump smacked down for blaming Harris for assassination attempt

CNN's Alayna Treene fact-checked Donald Trump's suggestion that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were to blame for his apparent assassination attempt.

The former president sat down for an interview that aired Tuesday night with "Dr. Phil" McGraw, saying that the president and vice president, who has since become the Democratic nominee, were partially responsible for failures that allowed a 20-year-old registered Republican to climb atop a roof at a Butler, Pennsylvania, campaign rally and fire off shots that may have struck his ear, killed a supporter and seriously wounded two others.

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'Misconstruing my comments': Fox News host faces backlash on 'inappropriate' Harris remark

Fox News anchor Jesse Watters is responding to backlash, after a military policy criticism of Vice President Kamala Harris that critics said was loaded with gratuitously sexualized language, according to The Washington Post.

“There’s been some attention to comments I made on the show yesterday about V.P. Harris,” said Watters on Tuesday, during the latest panel of "The Five." “People are misconstruing my comments to mean something inappropriate. I wasn’t suggesting anything of a sexual nature. I was expressing my opinion that V.P. Harris’s current leadership style could be an issue if elected.”

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The 'most radical' speech in DNC history — and you probably didn't see it

The Democratic National Convention on Thursday featured a video and speech from More Perfect Union reporter John Russell, who stressed to the Chicago crowd that the party has an opportunity to win over working-class people.

"Thank you to the workers that make this convention happen," Russell began. "Let's never forget how essential all of our labor is."

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Harris campaign focused on Arizona — here's why

Riding high on the recently completed Democratic National Convention and the enthusiasm that has propelled her to a lead in the national polls, Vice President Kamala Harris is launching a campaign to mobilize Generation Z voters on 150 campuses across battleground states.

And Arizona is the tip of the spear in that effort, with the Harris campaign focusing its “Back-to-School” campaign kick-off in the Grand Canyon State, with U.S. Rep. Maxwell Frost — the first Gen Z member of Congress — set to join students Wednesday at the University of Arizona in Tucson and then at Arizona State University in Tempe.

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Republicans left 'sort of confused' by 'surprising' Kamala Harris strategy: report

Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate Tim Walz are kicking off a bus tour in rural Georgia on Wednesday in a move that Politico's Playbook describes as "surprising."

While it may seem counterintuitive for the Democratic presidential ticket to campaign in counties that are heavily Republican, it turns out that there is precedent for this strategy being successful.

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'He is facing serious trials': Legal expert maps out status of Trump's prosecutions

Donald Trump's legal standing has shifted dramatically in the nearly two months since the U.S. Supreme Court granted him broad immunity from prosecution.

One of the cases against him was dismissed weeks later by federal judge Aileen Cannon, but his re-election chances took a major hit after Kamala Harris replaced President Joe Biden as the Democratic Party nominee and his legal jeopardy tightened Tuesday after special counsel Jack Smith filed a new indictment in his election subversion case that carves out some conduct that could be described as official actions.

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'This is simply insane': Questions raised about vetting of J.D. Vance amid new blow-up

During an appearance on "Morning Joe" on Wednesday morning, MSNBC host Symone Sanders Townsend expressed shock that another damaging video of Republican Party vice president candidate J.D. Vance has surfaced which will force the campaign of Donald Trump to remain on defense.

On Tuesday another clip of Vance attacking childless women surfaced, this one from during his run for the Senate seat he now occupies.

In the clip shared by "Morning Joe" fill-in host Katty Kay, Vance launched a broadside at teachers who don't have children of their own, telling a crowd he thinks they are "trying to brainwash the minds of our children."

ALSO READ: Cruelty is all the Republicans have left

He also singled out Randi Weingarten, the head of the American Federation of Teachers, and smeared her by exclaiming, "If she wants to brainwash and destroy the mind of children, she should have some of her own and leave ours the hell alone."

As Sanders Townsend pointed out, this is just creating more problems for Donald Trump's campaign when it comes to women voters.

"I don't know many children J.D. Vance himself has had," she began. "My understanding is his wife had the children so, you know, there we go. But you don't have a stake in the game here, America, that is just weird. It is weird and it is concerning."

"This all goes back to this is why vetting is important," she suggested. "I recently spoke to Eric Holder, former AG who did the vetting for the Harris/Walz campaign and I asked him, 'Are you sure you got everything?' because look at these videos coming out watching the videos with J.D. Vance. And he said he watched a lot of YouTube videos and he thinks he got it all but you can never be sure."

"I just — I have to wonder what was the vetting of J.D. Vance because this is simply insane," she concluded.
You can watch below or click here.

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'J.D. Vance is huge anvil on Trump's chances' after new comments emerge: CNN panelist

New remarks from J.D. Vance have surfaced about people without children, and a Democratic activist said the Republican vice presidential nominee was an "anvil" around his running mate's neck.

The Ohio Republican senator lashed out at Randi Weingarten, the head of the American Federation of Teachers, in remarks recorded in 2021, suggesting she and others on the left had no right to influence children because they had none of their own.

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'Is nothing sacred?': Morning Joe panel buries Trump over Arlington Cemetery scuffle

Reacting to a report that aides belonging to Donald Trump got into what is being called an "altercation" with one or more representatives at Arlington National Cemetery earlier this week, the panel on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" jumped all over the ex-president's campaign for trampling on sacred ground.

Late Tuesday it was reported that an official at Arlington attempted to stop the former president and his staff from turning a visit to the cemetery into a presidential campaign photo-op which led to verbal abuse and some shoving.

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Election experts cautious as Abbott touts voter roll purge

"Election experts cautious as Abbott touts voter roll purge" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

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'I don't have to take it lying down': How one AZ election official confronts 'bullies'

When Stephen Richer first campaigned to run elections in Arizona's largest county, the Republican official never expected to receive death threats for simply correcting misinformation about voting.

"All of it's beyond what I bargained for," Richer said in an interview with AFP at the high-security Maricopa County election center in Phoenix.

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