RawStory

2024 Elections

Reject the ‘extreme’ GOP and ‘MAGA weirdos’: AZ Democrats make their case to win

Democrats in Arizona have been crystal clear about their goal in 2024: follow up on the successes of 2022, when they won all of the top statewide offices, and wrest control of the legislature in the Grand Canyon State away from Republicans for the first time in nearly 60 years.

And nothing about how the July 30 primary elections went does anything to dampen the enthusiasm they can complete their takeover of Arizona’s government in November and usher in a new era of Democratic rule in a state that has gone from ruby red to deep purple in the last generation.

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Vance tries out new defense in scramble to 'deflect unfavorable attention'

Buffeted by past comments and low approval numbers in key states needed to win back the White House for Republicans in November, Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) is now trying out a new strategy to get the attention off of himself and back on presidential candidate Donald Trump.

According to a report from Politico's Jared Mitovich, the embattled GOP vice presidential candidate has been attempting to push back on attacks against him centered on his previous demeaning comments about so-called "childless cat ladies" and his links to the unpopular Project 2025.

As Mitovich explained, Vance is now attempting to diminish his role in the campaign by admitting his place near the top of the GOP tickets isn't really very important at all.

ALSO READ: J.D. Vance told 7-year-old son to 'shut the hell up' because Trump was on the phone

"Now, he’s downplaying his own relevance to the election entirely, " Mitovich wrote while pointing to an interview with the conservative Ohio Republican released on Friday.

While being interviewed on the "Full Send Podcast," Vance explained, "My attitude is, it doesn’t really matter, as much as this hits my ego. People are going to vote primarily for Donald Trump or for Kamala Harris. That’s the way these things go. I think my job over the next few months is to just drive home the message that Kamala Harris has been a bad vice president, and she’d be a worse president.”

According to the Politico report, this is a big change in strategy, noting it, "represents one of the campaign’s most direct attempts yet to deflect unfavorable attention away from him."

Vance's attempt to diminish his own stature falls in line with recent comments made by Trump who told reporters this week, "Historically, the vice president, in terms of the election, does not have any impact. I mean, virtually no impact … virtually never has it mattered.”

Adding insult to injury, Politico reports, "Trump also didn’t directly answer a question from Fox News anchor Harris Faulkner about whether Vance was ready to serve as president, should the opportunity arise in the future."

You can read more here.

Trump 'flailing' as Harris supporters turn his attacks into 'rallying points': Strategist

Former President Donald Trump was blindsided when President Joe Biden stepped down from his campaign for a second term and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris to take his place — but more than that, said political strategist Basil Smikle on Friday's edition of MSNBC's "The ReidOut," every attack he tries to throw at Harris ends up becoming weaponized against him.

"You're a veteran campaign operative, can you just put this in context?" asked anchor Joy Reid. "Have you ever seen, and we take into account that the Obama 2008 campaign was absolutely historic and had all of this energy. Compare all of this. Have you ever seen anything like this?"

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Harris' V.P. hopeful​ attacks Vance as 'phony baloney' after 'weird' Obama insult

Sen. J.D. Vance's attempted shot at a short-lister to become Vice President Kamala Harris' running mate backfired when said short-lister replied, in essence, "Thanks, weirdo."

Gov. Josh Shapiro (D-PA) laughed out loud during a Friday news conference at Cheyney University in Pennsylvania when a reporter told him he'd been dubbed by Trump's running mate as a "really bad impression of [former President] Barack Obama."

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'Couldn’t take the pressure': Kyle Rittenhouse abruptly flip flops after abandoning Trump

Kyle Rittenhouse, the shooter acquitted of murder charges in the deaths of two men during a Wisconsin protest, abruptly announced he was abandoning his support for Donald Trump in the 2024 election. But after a torrent of backlash from the right, Rittenhouse reversed his decision.

Internet troll Phillip Buchanan, who goes by CatTurd, got into an outright Twitter fight with Rittenhouse following his initial MAGA defection. The spat led the young shooter to block the large account.

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'Overheated' and 'vexatious': Hush money prosecutor hits back at latest Trump court claim

Hush money trial prosecutors hit back at Donald Trump's latest assault on Judge Juan Merchan in a filing that dubs the former president "vexatious and frivolous," court records show.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's team issued a blistering response to Trump's argument against the judge who oversaw the first trial to conclude with the criminal conviction of a former U.S. president.

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'Here we go!' Trump's 2020 election fraud case officially lands back with Judge Chutkan

Washington, D.C. District Court Justice Tanya Chutkan was re-handed Donald Trump's 2020 election fraud case Friday after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on his "presidential immunity" claims.

The High Court sent the case back to Chutkan after it decided that official acts of a president were immune from criminal prosecution — but it was up to her to decide which, if any, of Trump's actions in the election interference case were official.

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'Kamala is bragging': Harris' nomination victory spurs angry Trump team response

Vice President Kamala Harris secured enough delegation votes to win the presidential nomination at the Democratic National Convention this month — a development that was met with anger from the MAGA faithful.

Trump's campaign responded by referring to Harris by her first name and characterizing her response as "bragging."

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'Rattled' Trump allies now 'doubting themselves' after series of brutal missteps: analyst

The previously disciplined Donald Trump campaign is showing increasingly public signs of unraveling as questions are raised about attack lines on Vice President Kamala Harris, Sen. J.D. Vance's stumbling introduction to the public and Project 2025 getting tossed under the bus by the former president himself.

That is the opinion of MSNBC analyst Zeeshan Aleem who noted that disagreements within Trump's tightly-knit inner circle rarely are scrutinized in real-time but now are bubbling up in reports about campaign chaos.

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'People are not going to unsee': Trump pollster checked by CNN host who laughs in his face

A pollster for Donald Trump's campaign received an on-air check Friday when he tried to brush off the former president's racial attacks at an event for Black journalists.

John McLaughlin faced off against CNN anchor Dana Bash as she grilled Trump's in-house data-cruncher on the contrast between Republicans' inclusivity messaging and remarks at the National Association of Black Journalists that were broadly condemned as racist.

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'Boomerest': Trump jeered for 'word salad' answer in Fox Business interview

Donald Trump was jeered by social media users for his "word salad" comments about cryptocurrency during an interview with Fox Business Network.

The Republican presidential nominee touched on proposals, including ones by Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) and former House speaker Paul Ryan, for the U.S. government to invest in cryptocurrency to help pay down the national debt, although Trump offered few specifics in his comments to host Maria Bartiromo.

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J.D. Vance told 7-year-old son to 'shut the hell up' because Trump was on the phone

Sen. J.D. Vance, the running mate of former President Donald Trump who frequently calls childless Americans psychotic sociopaths, explained in an interview released Friday why he told his 7-year-old son to "shut the hell up."

"I'm on the phone with Donald Trump," Vance told conservative podcasters the Nelk Boys. "I'm like, 'Son, shut the hell up for 30 seconds.'"

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'Deception': Elon Musk reportedly tricking swing-state voters into giving up personal info

Tesla and Space X CEO Elon Musk is tricking voters in swing states into giving him all of their personal information for his political action committee, which could help Donald Trump in November, according to a new report.

CNBC political finance reporter Brian Schwartz explained that the website claims to offer a voter registration option. For someone who doesn't live in a swing state, they can enter their email and zip code and be taken to the website, where they can register in their state.

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