RawStory

2024 Elections

MSNBC reporter says 'stunned' audience of Black journalists were 'gasping' at Trump

MSNBC news reporter Yamiche Alcindor was in the room for the National Association of Black Journalists question-and-answer session with Donald Trump and reported that even among political experts, people were "gasping" at his comments.

Speaking to Nicolle Wallace for "Deadline: White House" Wednesday, Alcindor called it "remarkable" and "something to behold."

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'Bombed': Critics say 'racist' Trump 'destroyed himself' at NABJ event

Donald Trump "bombed" during a question-and-answer session with the National Association of Black Journalists in Chicago on Wednesday, according to those who watched the event unfold in person and online.

Trump has struggled to gain the media's favor since the Republican National Convention as running mate J.D. Vance became the topic of conversation among political analysts on cable news. Meanwhile, with President Joe Biden stepping down from the Democratic ticket, enthusiasm has boomed for Vice President Kamala Harris.

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'Absolute dumpster fire': Trump's interview with Black journalists shocks Fox News pundit

Fox News contributor Jessica Tarlov accused Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump of turning a conversation with Black journalists into a "dumpster fire."

At the National Association of Black Journalists conference on Wednesday, Trump began by calling ABC News host Rachel Scott's questions "horrible" and "nasty."

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Trump team cuts off Q&A with Black journalists as he gets booed by audience

Donald Trump appeared before the National Association of Black Journalists in Chicago on Wednesday for what was scheduled to be an hour-long question and answer session, but his team cut off the exchange in a little over 30 minutes.

Fox News host Harris Faulkner attempted to ask a question about Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation's controversial plan for Trump's second term in the White House. But ABC News' Rachel Scott cut in.

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'Hmmm': Trump's latest brag met with scorn from his own fans

Donald Trump issued an election brag on Wednesday that was met with harsh pushback from his own followers.

Trump took to Truth Social to advertise that one of his endorsed candidates, GOP State Senator Wendy Rogers, prevailed in her primary against a fellow Republican. The Arizona Mirror reports that Rogers "appears to have fended off a primary challenge from David Cook, a fellow GOP legislator, with early results showing her with a solid lead."

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'Persecuted by this Wack Job!' Trump makes frantic claims in rambling Truth Social post

Former President Donald Trump is claiming an influential charity whose members are barred from making political endorsements is warning Catholics away from "Crazy Kamala Harris."

Trump wrote on Truth Social Wednesday that the Catholic organization Knights of Columbus was launching a large political campaign against his presumed opponent in the 2024 presidential election.

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'Whole new race': Former RNC spokeswoman amazed by Harris enthusiasm at Atlanta rally

A former spokeswoman for the Republican National Committee was amazed by the thundering crowd vice president Kamala Harris drew at her rally in Georgia.

The vice president's campaign announced a crowd count of 10,000 in Atlanta, and former RNC spokeswoman Madison Gesiotto Gilbert warned Republicans that Harris was building up impressive momentum that could carry through to November's election.

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'You made a mistake': Trump buried for letting Don Jr. and Eric stick him with J.D. Vance

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," former NBC host Chris Matthews was pressed by the co-hosts on what Vice President Kamala Harris should do now that it seems assured like she has a clear path to take on Donald Trump in November's election.

Speaking with fill-in hosts Jonathan Lemire and Katty Kay, Matthews urged the vice president and whomever she picks as her running mate to keep on the attack and pointed out Trump is already reeling because he was foolish enough to listen to his sons Don Jr. and Eric when it came to his running mate.

With the Trump campaign having to daily put out fires based of previous statements made by Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) disparaging "childless cat ladies" and calling people without kids "sociopaths," Matthews explained the former president blew it.

ALSO READ: Mike Johnson's now-deleted Trump social media post sparks controversy

Addressing the choice of Vance as GOP vice presidential material, Matthews exclaimed, "He's a joke. He's a joke and now everybody knows it."

"The two Trump kids who picked him, apparently must be embarrassed they told his dad to pick this guy," he claimed. "They should have picked [North Dakota Gov. Doug] Burgum and they would have made Trump the business guy and the energy guy and it would have made sense and you made a mistake by listening to your kids."

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Pro-crypto super PACs pouring tens of millions into 2024 elections

This article originally appeared in OpenSecrets. Sign up for their weekly newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Former president Donald Trump’s selection of Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), as his running mate is expected to turbocharge the cryptocurrency industry’s spending in the 2024 election cycle.

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Trump's 'you won't have to vote anymore' rant more 'bonkers' than you realized: analysis

Former President Donald Trump stirred controversy over the weekend when he told a group of evangelical supporters that they wouldn't "have to vote anymore" if he won the 2024 presidential election.

While many Trump critics saw this as a pledge by the former president to rig or even block future elections from taking place, Washington Monthly writer Bill Scher believes that Trump was actually referring to a get-out-the-vote plan that Scher describes as simply "bonkers."

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'Danger': Experts issue warning after election denier wins swing state primary

An election-denier's victory in a key swing state primary has political experts warning of dark times ahead.

Justin Heap's defeat of Republican incumbent Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer in Arizona Tuesday shocked and disturbed conservatives and liberals alike.

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'It's weird and it's sticking': J.D. Vance can't escape his attacks on women

Kicking off Wednesday morning "Morning Joe," fill-in hosts Jonathan Lemire and Katty Kay quickly noted that Republican Vice Presidential candidate J.D. Vance's comments about "childless cat ladies" are not going away and are still fodder for late-night comedians.

And that is a big problem for Donald Trump's third bid for the Oval Office.

As MSNBC's Lemire put it, "We have children, we love our children and wouldn't do anything different in our lives, and to suggest that childless Americans don't have high-quality lives too, is not only inaccurate, but continues to be on a more serious note deeply offensive to people."

ALSO READ: Mike Johnson's now-deleted Trump social media post sparks controversy

"In a news cycle that's so fast, in a news cycle that's relentless and things — we see them move on to the next story within a few hours at times, this one is really staying, and particularly for someone like J. D. Vance, really trying to introduce himself nationally, this is not a good first impression."

"Yeah," Kay replied. "People with kids don't like it. People, of course, without kids don't like it, and then there's this weird policy proposal that people who have kids should get more votes in the United States."

"I don't know about you, but when I had kids and they were small, I think I should have had my votes taken away from me because my brain was so addled from lack of sleep, so I think I was the last person who should have had extra votes," she joked before adding, "Yeah, it's weird and it's sticking like you say and, of course, the Democrats are making hay out of it."

Watch below or at the link.

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'Not deserving': NC's largest newspaper calls on GOP to drop gubernatorial nominee

The most-read newspaper in North Carolina called on the state's Republican Party to withdraw its support from gubernatorial nominee Mark Robinson over a series of troubling reports about his background.

The lieutenant governor won the GOP primary over two more qualified candidates in a "fit of MAGA fever," the News & Observer's editorial board wrote, and they called on Republicans to "concede their party's error" and endorse Democratic nominee Josh Stein, who is currently the state's attorney general.

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