RawStory

2024 Elections

'Insecurity is staggering': Elections writer says GOP's new Walz attack is a 'compliment'

Republicans' latest attempts to attack Vice President Kamala Harris' running mate, Tim Walz, actually amount to a compliment, an elections opinion writer said on Saturday.

Walz has come under fire for his policies in Minnesota, including one in which he helped make menstruation products available for all students who could experience it. The right has responded by dubbing the governor "Tampon Tim."

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'Big ruling': Elections expert explains Trump's 'stinging defeat' in swing state lawsuit

Donald Trump's campaign just suffered a major loss in its attempt to disqualify mail-in ballots in a swing state, democracy Docket leader Marc Elias said over the weekend.

Elias, speaking on Democracy Watch on YouTube Saturday, explained how Republicans lost a lawsuit in Nevada by a state judge.

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'Fox is done': MAGA trashes Fox News after piece defending Tim Walz's military career

Fox News recently published an opinion piece from a veteran and former GOP lawmaker who came to the defense of Vice President Kamala Harris' pick for V.P., Tim Walz, leading to widespread attacks from MAGA.

The conservative media outlet published an article on Friday night entitled, "Tim Walz served his country honorably for 24 years. JD Vance, Trump need to respect that. He earned it." It was an opinion piece by former Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), who has been critical of Trump.

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Experts say Trump's vulgar insult for Harris 'not going to help him win more women voters'

Donald Trump was reported by the New York Times to be privately insulting Vice President Kamala Harris using vulgar and sexist language, leading to widespread condemnation and speculation from experts who say such attacks could cost him a key demographic.

According to the Times, "Indeed, Mr. Trump has often been in a foul mood the past few weeks. He has ranted about Ms. Harris. He has called her 'nasty,' on 'Fox & Friends,' and a 'b----,' repeatedly, in private, according to two people who heard the remark on different occasions."

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'Really, that song?' Celine Dion comes out swinging over Trump's use of Titanic theme song

Canadian singer Celine Dion "does not endorse" Donald Trump's purportedly unauthorized use of her "My Heart Will Go On" song and accompanying video at the former president's rally, according to a note from her management.

Trump was mocked on social media after using the song, widely known as the theme song for the movie Titanic, at his campaign rally in Montana.

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'Stupidity of these people': Trump team mocked after admitting falling for 'phishing' scam

Donald Trump's political campaign became the subject of mockery on Saturday after reporting being "hacked" by someone using a commonly used email tactic known as a "phishing" scam.

The Trump campaign reportedly told Politico that the team experienced a hack after the news outlet started receiving what appeared to be internal communications from an anonymous individual by email. Among the items the outlet says it received was a "dossier" on Trump's running mate, J.D. Vance.

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Trump campaign says it was hacked by 'foreign sources' after J.D. Vance dossier was leaked

Donald Trump's campaign has reported being hacked after Politico received a "dossier on J.D. Vance" from an anonymous account, the news agency reported on Saturday.

Politico reporter Alex Isenstadt flagged the news on social media, saying, "Trump's campaign says it has been hacked."

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'One answer to the threat we face': UAW says it knows how to defeat Trump

"There is only one answer to the threat we face as a nation. The answer is solidarity."

That is the core message directed at the American working class from the United Auto Workers (UAW) in a new ad that frames the nation's current political battle as one between organized workers and the billionaire and corporate classes.

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'Donald was terrified': Ex-Trump exec laughs recalling his 'bumpy' helicopter ride panic

During an appearance on MSNBC to talk about Donald Trump's claims about almost being a victim of a helicopter crash, a former Trump Organization executive claimed the former president was being overly dramatic recalling the incident while laughingly recounting how he reacted during the landing.

Speaking with MSNBC fill-in host Ali Vitali, Barbara Res, who has been a go-to source on the Trump Organization's inner workings after rising up the ranks over 18 years said she was on the flight and helped arrange it.

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Trump-backed Senate candidate facing financial ruin as he touts his business success

Businessman Tim Sheehy, who is seeking Democratic Sen. Jon Tester's seat in the U.S. Senate representing Montana, is on the verge of watching the business he started and touts as his main qualification for the job collapse because his company can't pay its bills.

Sheehy, who was already under scrutiny dating back to April over his claims about when he served as a Navy SEAL, was a focal point of Donald Trump's trip to Montana on Friday for his own campaign appearance this week as presidential opponent Vice President Kamala Harris barnstorms the country with her running mate Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN).

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How J.D. Vance’s 'creepy tendencies' make him 'the worst kind of nerd': columnist

In an effort to make himself more relatable to voters, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) has attempted to embrace nerd culture. But one columnist is arguing that the GOP's 2024 vice presidential nominee is only further showcasing his most unlikeable traits.

In a Saturday op-ed, MSNBC opinion columnist Hayes Brown wrote that the Ohio Republican is hoping to shed the "weird" label by leaning into his nerdy past. Vance's wife, Usha, recently did an interview with Fox & Friends talking about her husband's prior obsession with the card game "Magic: The Gathering."

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'Disoriented' Trump alarming insiders and donors after 'series of damaging mistakes'

Since Vice President Kamala Harris has ascended to the top spot on the 2024 Democratic ticket, a "disoriented" Donald Trump has gone down a path of unforced errors and campaign mistakes that have both donors and his staffers worried he can't turn his fortunes around.

In a deep dive in the New York Times, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan detail a series of meet-ups with donors where questions about the direction of the former president's third bid for the Oval Office are not being answered in a way that has created renewed confidence.

As the report states, at a recent donor dinner the former president met questions about what is in store now that Trump is facing a surging Harris only to be met with him telling them, "We’ve got to stop the steal,” to the dismay of some of his advisers.

In one instance, one longtime donor asked "how Mr. Trump planned to take the narrative back from Democrats, and what his positive vision for the country would be" which only led to the former president lashing out at his opponent and then adding, "I am who I am."

According to Haberman and Swan, Trump seems "disoriented" by his advisers over the fact that he won't be facing President Joe Biden in November.

ALSO READ: Bombshell secret training videos detail how a second Trump administration would operate

"The fund-raiser came amid a stretch of flailing and self-harm that began after President Biden’s July 21 withdrawal from the race and endorsement of Ms. Harris to succeed him. Close Trump allies have described this as the rockiest period of Mr. Trump’s campaign, " they wrote before adding, "As Ms. Harris — long ridiculed and underestimated — has transformed the contest, campaigning energetically and drawing roughly even with Mr. Trump in many polls, Mr. Trump has responded with one unforced error after another while struggling to land on an effective and consistent argument against her."

One key problem with the Trump campaign is the fact that the candidate is ignoring advice from consultants who believe they have a wealth of ammunition to use against the vice president.

"Most of Mr. Trump’s top advisers have urged the campaign and the candidate to focus on the economy, immigration and crime — issues on which Mr. Trump’s message resonates powerfully with the so-called persuadable voters they are targeting. Sometimes, Mr. Trump has done so. Other times, he has not," the report notes.

Pointing out, "The people around Mr. Trump see a candidate knocked off his bearings," the Times report goes on to note that Trump seems obsessed that he won't be facing Biden before adding, "Indeed, Mr. Trump has often been in a foul mood the past few weeks. He has ranted about Ms. Harris. He has called her 'nasty,' on 'Fox & Friends,' and a 'b---h,' repeatedly, in private, according to two people who heard the remark on different occasions."

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Trump 'must be high as hell': MSNBC hosts laugh at ex-president's latest popularity claim

On Saturday morning, MSNBC "The Weekend" co-hosts Alicia Menendez and Michael Steele laughed at new claims Donald Trump recently made about how popular he is with voters.


As former RNC chair Steele jokingly put it, it appears that the former president must be getting high lately.

Reacting to the former president speaking to reporters earlier this week at his Mar-a-Lago resort, where he claimed he drew more people to the Washington Mall than legendary civil rights icon Martin Luther King did in1963 for his "I have a dream" speech, Steele and Menendez couldn't control their amusement at the bizarre claim.

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