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2024 Elections

CNN panel laughs off conservative's strategy for a Trump debate win

On Sunday morning, CNN contributor Bakari Sellers couldn't keep from laughing when former Donald Trump adviser David Urban suggested the former president could win Thursday's first presidential debate by being restrained and letting President Joe Biden talk.

Sellers was not the only "State of the Union" panelist to find Urban's suggestion laughable.

According to Urban, Trump won the last debate with Biden in 2020 but no one was watching so it didn't save him.

"The problem was nobody was watching the second debate because in the first debate president Trump was talking over Biden, wasn't letting him make his point," Urban recalled. "I think if former president Trump were smart, he would just say to the crowd, 'Are you better off now than you were four years ago?' and then just let Joe Biden talk."

"Just let him talk, don't try to overstep. Let him try to make his case because he has a record to defend. So if I was trapped, that's what I do here," he added.

As the panel laughed, Sellers joked, "He acts like Donald Trump is disciplined," to more laughter before adding, "That's not going to happen. Donald Trump is not going to stay on message."

"What we know about this debate though, is that the expectation level for Joe Biden is extremely low," he continued. "It's extremely low because Republicans set the bar in hell for him day in and day out when they call him infirm."

"In hell?" fill-in host Kaitlan Collins interrupted.

"In hell, that's as low as low as the bar can be," Sellers replied to more laughter.

Watch below or at the link.


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Kristi Noem says 'any mom' would have killed her 'vicious' puppy named Cricket

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) defended killing her puppy, Cricket, because he was "vicious."

During a Sunday interview on Meet the Press, host Peter Alexander asked Noem if the story about her shooting a dog hurt her chances of being Donald Trump's vice presidential running mate.

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'He is a convicted felon': Fox News host loses control after Dem lists Trump's crimes

Fox News host Shannon Bream cut off Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) after he pointed out that presumptive Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump was a convicted felon.

Coons brought up Trump's crimes during a Sunday interview about President Joe Biden's actions on undocumented immigration.

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'It's brilliant': Fox News hosts explode with laughter at Trump's migrant fight proposal

The hosts of Fox & Friends couldn't stop laughing about presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump's proposal to force migrants to fight each other.

During the Sunday edition of Fox & Friends, hosts Will Cain, Rachel Campos-Duffy, and Charlie Hurt seemed delighted at Trump's idea of creating a UFC league for migrants.

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'We’re pretty well rudderless': GOP senators scrambling as McConnell heads for the door

With Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) stepping down from his leadership position, a power struggle among Republicans is underway to succeed him with hardliners lining up on one side and moderates who want to get legislation passed in a mostly evenly split Senate on the other side.

According to a new report from Politico, McConnell is not even out the door yet as he steps down from his leadership position in November and the jockeying to replace him is in full swing with the leading candidates appearing to be Sens. John Thune (R-SD), John Cornyn (R-TX) and Rick Scott (R-FL).

Far-right Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) said he wants to see a leader who is a rock-ribbed hardliner who won't give an inch, telling Politico, "Compromise is not the problem. The problem is where you choose to make the deals and where you draw the line, in particular in spending bills. Yeah, I got a problem with how they’ve been drawn.”

Politico's Ursula Perano and Burgess Everett wrote, "Hardline Republicans like Lee, though they’re in the minority of the GOP, are pushing back against a more conciliatory wing of their conference that sees the Senate as a bastion of bipartisan collaboration in a broken capital. So, Lee is pushing leadership hopefuls and colleagues to join a pledge to block all 'political and judicial' nominees for the rest of the term and muck up Democratic legislative priorities — tactics the right launched after Donald Trump was convicted."

As the scramble to assume McConnell's mantle grows, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) admitted, " ...we have a leadership vacuum right now. We’re pretty well rudderless.”

The report adds, "Johnson is among those who has signed Lee’s letter vowing to block nominees on the Senate floor in response to Trump’s conviction, which has become something of a litmus test among ambitious conservatives. Scott has signed on, as has Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who is competing for the conference’s No. 3 spot."

Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) pointed at the turmoil in the House that saw Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) deposed and had Republican lawmakers at each other's throats with hard feelings still remaining.

“We will be making an enormous mistake if we let a minority of our members further weaken an already weak leader,” he complained before singling out the GOP House infighting and stating, Senate Republicans "are just not paying attention to the reality of what has occurred as a result of that in the House.”

You can read more here.

'Disruptive drama queen': Lauren Boebert in trouble with Colorado voters

Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert's political future could be decided this week as Colorado voters in a new district head to the polls as she runs on a new district where she is proving to be a "hard sell" to skeptical conservatives.

That's according to the New York Times' Michelle Cottle, who has been on the campaign trail with the controversial lawmaker who jumped districts months ago when it looked like she would not make the cut with voters who had previously voted for her but then grew tired of her act.

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'Desperate' defense of 'a convicted felon': Expert explains Trump's Christian supporters

Former President Donald Trump is aiming to shore up support among what is arguably the most important foundational bloc of supporters in the MAGA movement — conservative Christian evangelicals.

The Guardian reported Saturday that Ralph Reed, who is the founder and chair of the far-right Faith & Freedom Coalition, has promised to deliver millions of evangelical voters to Trump's side in the handful of battleground states that will decide the November election, calling it "the biggest turnout of Christian voters in American history." This includes a promise to knock on 10 million doors of conservative Christian households, to make 10 million phone calls to drive voter turnout, send 25 million text messages and have 30 million voter guides placed in approximately 113,000 churches.

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DNC moves ahead on all-virtual roll call for Biden presidential nomination

WASHINGTON — The Democratic National Committee has taken a significant step toward formally designating Joe Biden as the party’s presidential nominee before the Democratic convention in August — a move that’s necessary to place him on the Ohio ballot for November’s election, States Newsroom has been told.

DNC members finalized their vote Thursday to move forward with an all-virtual roll call vote after 360 members voted in favor, two voted against and five abstained, according to a spokesperson.

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'Zero attendees in the upper bowl':  Trump mocked for 'half empty' swing state speech

Donald Trump on Saturday held a speech in Pennsylvania, but some liberals and conservatives alike are suggesting the crowd could have been larger.

Trump, who during his speech in Philadelphia had several verbal "misfires" that caused social media users to question the former president's mental acuity, has in the past heavily emphasized the numbers at his politically charged rallies as an indication of popularity.

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'He's scared': Trump called out for startling rally 'confession' about upcoming debate

Donald Trump on Saturday predicted that President Joe Biden would be "jacked up" on drugs at the upcoming presidential debate, but his odd choice of descriptors left the internet wondering whether the former president was speaking from experience.

Trump, who was also ridiculed for numerous verbal "misfires" during his speech, suggested that Biden will outperform expectations when they finally debate.

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'Tug drug': Trump ridiculed for multiple verbal 'misfires' at Philadelphia MAGA rally

Donald Trump Saturday stunned critics watching his MAGA rally in Philadelphia by having numerous "misfires" during his speech.

Trump delivered his remarks at the rally in Philadelphia after an event earlier in the day in Washington, D.C. At the first event, the former president came under fire for a purportedly "incoherent" defense of a rant he said the press had previously deemed "rambling."

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Trump just revealed his debate strategy. Here's how Biden's team is responding

Former President Donald Trump recently telegraphed how he'll come at President Joe Biden in next week's presidential debate. Now, Biden's advisors are refining the president's counter-attack.

In his latest column for the New Republic, writer Greg Sargent delved into how Biden's campaign team is preparing the president to respond to likely attacks from his Republican opponent focused on immigration. On his Truth Social platform, Trump strongly hinted that he'll be attempting to pin isolated incidents of undocumented immigrants committing violent crimes on Biden.

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'Babbling': Trump biographer predicts ex-president will be 'fumbling badly' at debate

At the upcoming presidential debate, Donald Trump will shine a spotlight on the fact that he's not more mentally sharp than President Joe Biden, according to the former president's biographer.

Tim O'Brien, who spent massive amounts of time with Trump before writing TrumpNation: The Art of Being the Donald, appeared on MSNBC on Saturday where he was asked about Trump's debate with Biden. Earlier this month, O'Brien undermined the ex-president's claim that he wasn't concerned about jail after being convicted on 34 counts.

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