RawStory

2024 Elections

Trump served notice by Michigan AG to not even try to 'subvert' the 2024 election results

During an appearance on MSNBC on Saturday afternoon, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel (D) claimed she fully expects Donald Trump will once again try and tamper with the presidential election results in her state in November and that she will be prepared.

Speaking with host Katie Phang, Nessel, who gave a widely lauded speech at the recently concluded Democratic National Convention where she wished the conservative United States Supreme Court good luck prying "this wedding ring from my cold, dead, gay hand," was asked what she expects in November.

"How worried are you about Donald Trump and his allies trying to repeat what they attempted to do four years ago?" host Phang prompted her guest.

ALSO READ: Trump is losing his audience

"I think it is probably his number one strategy, honestly," she admitted. "I really don't see him making an effort to try to convert undecided voters. More than that, what I see is these efforts that are already in place here on the ground in Michigan to try to subvert the election through illegal means and, to really try to enlist as many Republicans on the ground as possible, whether those are poll workers, whether those are local clerks, whether those are party activists."

"I think that what we saw in 2020, you know, it is going to pale in comparison to what we are likely going to see in 2024 and, again, it is not my job to decide winners or losers. it is my job to defend the will of the people, whatever that might be," she continued. "But I can tell you this: if the will of the people here in Michigan is that they support Kamala Harris as our next president of the United States, you know, it is going to be tough."

"I don't think anybody should underestimate how hard we are going to have to fight to defend people's votes against an effort by the Trump campaign to subvert democracy here in Michigan and likely and states all across the nation."

Watch below or at the link.

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'He looks like an idiot': Analyst pinpoints Trump's growing re-election problem

Donald Trump's inability to lay off the personal attacks on Vice President Kamala Harris could end up being a central reason he might falter in his bid to be re-elected in November.

That is opinion of popular commentator Kara Swisher who took part in a panel on CNN with host Chris Wallace on Saturday.

While covering a wide range of topics, Wallace — formerly a longtime host on Fox News — asked his guest, "Kara, are Trump's personal attacks undercutting, at the same time, he's trying to make an argument about her on policy?"

ALSO READ: Trump is losing his audience

"Yes, keep them coming, he looks like an idiot when he's doing them," Swisher replied. "Honestly, it's just he can't help himself and he doesn't know how to deal with her."

"It's really interesting to watch him trying to formulate an attack and it has to be personal," she continued. "And the other part is, I know this sounds crazy, but he talks about her looks a lot and everything with Trump is looks and it's creepy. And he's he thinks she's pretty and beautiful and he doesn't know what to do. "

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'Very unpopular': Editor of conservative outlet admits 'weak' Trump is 'definitely nuts'

The last month has arguably been the worst yet for former President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign. The emergence of Vice President Kamala Harris as the last-minute Democratic nominee has had Trump in a tailspin, and now even the editor of a major conservative news outlet is admitting that the GOP's chances of victory in November are slim.

In a recent column, National Review executive editor Mark Antonio Wright weighed in on the disarray of the Republican ticket and Trump's careening presidential campaign. While opining that the GOP nominee isn't getting fair treatment by the mainstream press, Wright nonetheless attributed Trump's flagging 2024 operation to the fact that he is simply "very unpopular" and that Harris represents a welcome departure from what was previously a stale race.

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James Carville brings down the house on HBO with blunt prediction about the GOP's future

During an appearance on HBO's "Real Time" on Friday night, longtime Democratic strategist James Carville offered some blunt advice to a Republican lawmaker on what the future holds for his party if Donald Trump remains a black cloud over the GOP.

During the "Real Time Overtime" segment posted to YouTube, the folksy and uncensored Carville spoke directly to Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX), an occasional Trump critic, and stated that he better hope the former president loses in a landslide in November because it will benefit the GOP.

"If I'm one of you, I want Trump to get beat bad," Carville began. "I'm talking about a '64, '72 wipeout."

ALSO READ: Trump is losing his audience

Elaborating, he continued, "You know what happened after Republicans got wiped out in 1964? They won in '68. You know what happened after the Democrats got wiped out in '72? They won in '76."

"If Harris gets 280 Electoral College votes, your party is f----d, "He blurted while the Real Time crowd burst into laughter and applause as he added, "You want a wipeout."

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'The party needs to burn to the ground': Former adviser rips into GOP under Trump

Sitting in on a panel of conservatives who have abandoned the Republican Party due to the dominance of Donald Trump, one former GOP campaign adviser suggested the only way to save her former party is to destroy it and rebuild it again from the ashes.

Appearing on MSNBC's "The Weekend," Tara Setmayer explained that she can't even attend conservative events anymore due to the overt hostility she faces because she does not support Trump's takeover of the Republican Party.

Speaking with the hosts, she claimed the GOP as it is currently run is no longer salvageable.

ALSO READ: Trump is losing his audience

Pointing out the stunning number of former Trump officials who have gone public and said, "If you care about truth, democracy, and decency, if you care about these things that are institutions, you cannot vote for this man," Setmayer claimed the very fact Republicans are still lining up behind the former president is untenable.

"I'm sorry, the party needs to burn to the ground and start anew," she claimed. "If something comes out of the ashes, I will be the first one there, someone right at the center to help build it up, because we need the difference in opinions on policy."

"This is not an election about policy," she continued. "It is an election about character. It is an election about how you want this country to look, and who you want to lead it. For women, it is an election that is literally life or death for us."

Watch below or at the link.

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Trump admits to aides he's struggling to 'stay on message': NYT

With advisers and key donors pleading with Donald Trump to dial back the personal attacks and stick to addressing issues they believe will resonate with voters, the former president reportedly has told insiders he is having a "struggle."

According to a new report from the New York Times' Michael C. Bender and Michael Gold, the Trump campaign has gamed out a battle plan for taking on Vice President Kamala Harris, hitting her on crime and problems at the border, but they are having continual problems making the GOP nominee stick to the script.

As the report notes, casino magnate and prominent Trump donor Steve Wynn has battled with the former president about how he is going about campaigning and went to the expense of commissioning a poll that shows Trump needs independent voters if we wants to win.

ALSO READ: Trump is losing his audience

Despite that, the Times is reporting that Trump is admitting that he feels the Democratic attacks on him are so personal that he has no choice to respond in kind to the dismay of some of his advisers.

"Mr. Trump has told two people that he struggles to avoid making personal attacks because of how much animosity he feels for his opponents. He said that overwhelming hostility — whether it was for Jeb Bush, Hillary Clinton, President Biden or now Ms. Harris — made it difficult for him to not take shots, said the two people, who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversations," the Times report states.

Adding to the Trump campaign woes is their candidate's evident lack of interest in talking about policies during his rallies because they don't generate the responses from the crowd that fuels him.

"Part of Mr. Trump’s struggle to stay on message could be linked to his visible lack of interest onstage when he reads his prepared speech. When Mr. Trump stuck to the script, he often sounded affectless, as if he was resigned to just getting through the remarks. But he seemed energized when he fell back on familiar habits and interacted with supporters at the smaller events," the report states.

According to one GOP campaign strategist, the former president is currently not doing himself any favors.

“One of the ways to win over swing voters is not by personal attacks — by nature, they don’t love partisan politics, but they’re also not thrilled about the direction of the country and the performance of the economy,” explained Kevin Madden. “And every day Trump isn’t talking about that is a wasted day.”

You can read more here.

'Uncharted waters': Experts suggest Trump’s looming sentence could include prison time

On September 18 — just 48 days before the election — former President Donald Trump is due to appear in Manhattan, where he will be sentenced for 34 felony convictions. Some criminal justice experts believe the ex-president could very well end up behind bars.

Newsweek reported that University of California-Berkeley law professor John Yoo, who served in former President George W. Bush's Department of Justice, said Judge Juan Merchan may very well include a stretch of prison time when handing down his sentence. However, he noted that incarcerating the 2024 Republican presidential nominee could be seen as an overtly political move that could favor Trump in the appeals process.

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'What gives her the right to run?' Trump launches overnight tirade at Kamala Harris

Very late Friday night, Donald Trump interrupted a series of endorsements for Republican candidates competing in the 2024 election to lodge new charges against Vice President Kamala Harris, questioning whether she should be allowed to run for president as he is.

After a week where Harris jumped to leads in a series of polls following a widely watched Democratic National Convention, the former president pushed back following a rally in Arizona.

Taking to his Truth Social platform, he made a series of dubious claims about Harris and raged, once again, that she received no votes during the Democratic primaries when President Joe Biden was expected to be the 2024 Democratic presidential nominee.

ALSO READ: Donald Trump exploits AP photo error for new $99 'Save America' book

Trump began, "Kamala Harris is the Weakest Presidential Candidate in History on Crime. She’s allowed millions of people to pour through our Borders, many from prisons, mental institutions and, indeed, terrorists, coming in at levels never seen before. What gives her the right to run for President?"

He then continued, " She got no votes to Biden’s 14 Million. She failed in her previous attempt, was the first one out of 22 people to quit, never made it to Iowa, and now she’s a Presidential Candidate?"

"This is a Threat to Democracy!" he added.

As RFK Jr. backs Trump, here's the secretive billionaire plutocrat funding them both

Joining Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump onstage at a campaign rally in Arizona Friday night, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tried to emphasize what the two share.

"We talked about not the values that separate us, because we don't agree on everything, but on the values and issues that bind us together," Kennedy said shortly after suspending his independent presidential bid to throw his support behind Trump.

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Trump declares support for keeping subminimum wage in Las Vegas

Former president Donald Trump’s first campaign event in Nevada since his Democratic rival Joe Biden dropped out was billed as an event to tout Trump’s “no tax on tips” policy.

But that message was overshadowed by Arizona independent candidate Robert F Kennedy’s announcement that he was dropping out of the race and endorsing Trump.

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Kamala Harris’ campaign is basically 2008 Barack Obama — but with dirty jokes: reporter

Vice President Kamala Harris's campaign against Donald Trump echoes Barack Obama's 2008 effort — but with a key difference, Washington Bureau chief Benjy Sarlin said in a Semafor column Friday.

According to Sarlin, the two candidates might have a lot of differences, but they're both painting themselves in a "post-partisan" era. As Obama said in 2008, it was to “cast off the worn-out ideas and politics of the past” and move beyond the psychodramas of the George W. Bush and Bill Clinton eras.

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'Almost killed my wife': Texas man reads Trump the riot act on reproductive rights

For the last several months, former President Donald Trump has falsely claimed that an overwhelming majority of legal scholars wanted to see the overturning of Roe v. Wade so that the issue of abortion rights could be returned to the states.

When heartbreaking stories began to spread about those suffering as a result of the elimination of Roe, Trump tried to deflect blame for the decision and . A CNN fact-check called the claim "wildly inaccurate."

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'Win for Trump': Sources say Jack Smith won't demand pre-election 'mini-trial'

Former President Donald Trump scored a win in his election interference case that could have major ramifications for American voters, according to a new analysis and sources close to the prosecution.

Special Counsel Jack Smith has opted not to demand a evidentiary hearing in his Washington D.C. federal court case against Trump before voters cast their ballots for the next U.S. president on Nov. 5, Bloomberg reported Friday.

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