RawStory

2024 Elections

'No Plan B': Dystopian game finds Trump regime would be unstoppable in the White House

A dystopian simulation game played by hundreds of the nation's political leaders revealed a disturbing truth about Donald Trump's potential return to the White House: there is no "effective Plan B."

Among the players was political affairs analyst and businessman David Rothkopf, who reported for the New Republic Tuesday on that nearly 200 experts in policy, law and national security proved unable to protect American democracy against a Trump takeover in multiple nonpartisan simulations.

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Roger Stone says injury to Donald Trump's ear was 'foreseen in the Bible'

Roger Stone, a longtime adviser to Donald Trump, claimed that the wound to the former president's ear was "foreseen in the Bible."

During a Tuesday interview with Real America's Voice host and conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec, Stone argued the U.S. Secret Service "created a series of events in which they likely thought" Trump would be killed during an assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania.

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'I am shocked!' Ex-Trump aide surprised nobody fired over campaign's Harris response

Former White House communications director Alyssa Farah Griffin thinks someone on Donald Trump's team should be fired for failing to prepare for a campaign against Vice President Kamala Harris.

Speaking with her colleagues on "The View" Tuesday, Griffin described how shocked she has been watching the Trump team flail as it tried to figure out a way to attack Harris.

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Trump flails as Fox News forces him to defend picking Vance: ‘He’s not against anything’

Before and after he launched a barrage of attacks against Fox News, Donald Trump Monday night sat down with Fox News host Laura Ingraham who asked him about a wide range of issues. From his damning remarks Friday saying people won't have to vote again if they vote for him in November, to asking if he will leave office after four years if elected, to asking why not debate Kamala Harris, to asking him to defend choosing U.S. Senator JD Vance (R-OH) as his vice presidential running mate, Trump served up responses that critics say did not quell concerns.

Many made clear they believe the interview did not go well.

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'Major moment in this race': Trump's 'horrible Jew' agreement sparks immediate uproar

Donald Trump might have just delivered a fatal blow to his reelection campaign in a disturbing interview about Jewish Americans.

Trump stunned the nation with his Tuesday morning appearance on the conservative radio show "Sid & Friends In The Morning" during which he calmly replied "yes" to the hosts' jab at Vice President Kamala Harris' husband Doug Emhoff.

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Trump's nephew tells 'The View' of how uncle tried to throw Black kid in jail

Donald Trump's nephew Fred Trump III spoke with the women of "The View" on Tuesday about his new book, which describes life in the Trump family — with close focus on his uncle.

The younger Trump writes in his book that he was very close to his uncle as his father, an alcoholic, wasn't available to his children.

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'Partisan': Ron Johnson critiques FBI for tagging Trump shooting 'domestic terrorism'

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) urged the FBI not to use the term "domestic terrorism" to refer to the shooting of former President Donald Trump because he suggested that it was a "partisan" attack on Republicans.

At a U.S. Senate hearing on the assassination attempt against Trump on Tuesday, Johnson questioned Deputy FBI Director Paul Abbate.

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'Completely ridiculous': Amy Klobuchar slams conspiracy theories on Trump shooting

Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) refuted conspiracies from the right and the left political fringes about the shooting of former President Donald Trump.

At a Senate hearing on Tuesday, Klobuchar asked acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe to dispel conspiracy theories that suggested that the shooting did not take place, as well as one that the government purposefully allowed the incident to occur.

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'That doesn't make any sense': Republican's J.D. Vance defense shut down on CNN

A Republican's attempt to defend Sen. J.D. Vance's problematic cat lady comments quickly exasperated a Democrat who shut down his argument with a single question: "How are you going to prosecute a prosecutor?"

That was the question Michael Blake, former vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, put to former National Republican Senatorial committee aide Liam Donovan on CNN Tuesday morning.

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'Go after Meta and Google!' Furious Trump sics MAGA hoards on social media moguls

Donald Trump lashed out at Facebook Tuesday after the social media company apologized for fact-checking a photograph of the assassination attempt he faced earlier this month.

Trump accused both Facebook and Google of plotting against his presidential reelection bid by censoring photographs of the bloody and deadly attack in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13.

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'Psychotic': CNN deep dive exposes new depths of J.D. Vance's disdain for childless women

Donald Trump's running mate Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) has a long history of calling childless Americans "sociopaths," according to a new analysis.

CNN uncovered Tuesday multiple moments when Trump's running mate — facing a severe backlash for his "childless cat lady" comment — accused people without children of being psychotic.

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'Bending of reality': U.S. liberals stoke political conspiracies

From false claims of a "staged" assassination attempt on Donald Trump to a viral joke about his running mate having sex with a couch, American liberals have taken a page from the far-right's playbook in pushing wild conspiracy theories ahead of US elections.

The liberal and left-wing warping of reality -- a trend some call "BlueAnon," a play on the QAnon conspiracy cult -- is fueling information chaos on social media platforms that are already a cesspool of right-wing falsehoods.

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Ultra-accurate historian says 'a lot would have to go wrong' for this candidate to lose

After predicting decades of presidential elections with near-perfect accuracy, historian Allan Lichtman revealed that Democrats have the edge using his time-tested formula.

Lichtman told Fox News that he used 13 true-false questions — which he calls "keys" — to determine who will win the presidency. A candidate receives a "key" if a question is true.

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