Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

2024 Elections

'I picked Milwaukee, I know it well': Trump scrambles to deny 'horrible city' insult

Moments before Donald Trump took to Truth Social to shoot down a report that his meeting with high-powered CEOs went sideways because he couldn't stay on topic, he attempted to clean up the mess he made by calling the 2024 Republican Convention host city "horrible."

Despite the fact that GOP lawmakers who were in the room with him admitted he did say it and then tried to explain it away to reporters, the former president was insistent and asked why he would make such a blunder.

Keep reading... Show less

Plan to fast-track allowing convicted felon Trump to vote bashed by leading Florida paper

A plan by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) to jump Donald Trump to the front of the line so that the Florida Clemency Board can restore his ability to vote after being convicted of multiple felonies was hammered by the Miami Herald.

As the paper notes, Florida voters approved a constitutional amendment in 2018 that would restore voting rights for convicted felons as long as their crimes did not involve violent crimes or sex offenses, but DeSantis has thrown up roadblocks that needlessly delay the process.

As the Herald's editorial board wrote, "The line of Black and Hispanic people waiting to get their voting rights restored is miles long, despite the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition doing its best to streamline the process. Yes, the clemency board has broad authority to restore rights. The challenge under DeSantis has been when people of color try to get their voting rights restored and face barriers."

However, with Trump convicted of 34 felony counts of business fraud in Manhattan, DeSantis is interceding on the former president's behalf so that he can, presumably, vote for himself in November. Trump is a Florida resident, having switched from New York five years ago.

With DeSantis boasting on X, "The bottom line is that Donald Trump’s vote this November will be one of millions that demonstrate Florida is now a solid Republican state!” the Herald took the stance that he should get in line like every other felon and wait his turn.

"DeSantis should apply the same rules he plans to use to help felonious Trump to all the people who qualify under the constitutional amendment that voters approved six long years ago. That would be equal justice," they wrote.

You can read more here.

Trump campaign is 'miscalculating how this election is going to be won': ex-RNC official

A plan by Donald Trump's presidential campaign to outsource get-out-the-vote efforts in what is expected to be a tight race for the presidency with President Joe Biden is getting a thumbs-down from a former Republican National Committee official.

According to a report from CNN, the Trump campaign, which is trailing Biden's campaign in fundraising and is being hurt by having to funnel millions to the now-convicted felon Trump's lawyers as his legal bills keep piling up, is making a "risky" bet on using outside groups to get conservative voters to the polls.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump insider fretting over how he'll deal with getting his mic cut during Biden debate

With both Donald Trump and President Joe Biden prepping for the June 27 debate — the first of the 2024 presidential campaign — there are growing concerns within the former president's camp that the two-minute time limit for answers combined with the candidate's mic being muted when it is not their turn will prove difficult for Trump who is known to ramble.

The debate, to be held on CNN with "State of the Union" hosts Jake Tapper and Dana Bash serving as moderators, has a much stricter set of rules than were implemented when the two faced off four years ago, and campaign strategists are prepping their candidates accordingly.

Outside of having no audience on hand, the control of the candidate's microphone will be the most obvious change.

As the New York Times is reporting, "There will be no opening statements. President Biden and former President Donald J. Trump will each have two minutes to answer questions — followed by one-minute rebuttals and responses to the rebuttals. Red lights visible to the candidates will flash when they have five seconds left, and turn solid red when time has expired. And each man’s microphone will be muted when it is not his turn to speak."

RELATED: CEOs startled that Trump 'couldn't keep a straight thought' during meeting

Noting that four years ago, Trump continued to talk over Biden which led to the Democart to tell him, "Will you shut up, man?” the Times report notes, "The rules circulated by CNN warn that this time, 'moderators will use all tools at their disposal to enforce timing."'

One former adviser to Trump said the new restrictions may put the former president at a disadvantage.

With the Times report noting, "For his part, Mr. Trump has never consented to anything resembling traditional, rigorous debate preparation, and this election appears no exception. He has often said that he is at his best when improvising," former 2020 Trump campaign adviser Marc Lotter admitted, "He views his rallies as debate prep. If they’re literally going to cut your mic, you’ve got to hit your marks."

Keep reading... Show less

Kevin McCarthy can’t stop losing. Nancy Mace can’t stop loving it.

WASHINGTON — In the territory Kevin McCarthy once ruled with a wooden, if limp, gavel, Republicans in the House of Representatives spent the week laughing off the former House speaker for meddling in GOP primaries — then getting walloped.

McCarthy and his allies were dealt a stunning defeat in the Palmetto State when Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) turned heads for destroying her Republican primary opponent by some 27 points.

Keep reading... Show less

Mike Tyson decries Trump conviction: 'That’s the way they did Black people'

Mike Tyson, a former world heavyweight boxing champion who was convicted of rape, compared the legal system's treatment of former President Donald Trump to that of Black people, according to a new report.

Tyson echoed Trump's own claims that his prosecution in Manhattan criminal court — which ended with a unanimous guilty verdict on 34 counts of falsifying business records — was comparable to the historic injustice Black people have faced in American courtrooms, Semafor reported Friday.

Keep reading... Show less

'Unprecedented access': Trump's Georgia prosecution will be subject of new documentary

Former President Donald Trump's criminal election racketeering case in Georgia will be the subject of a new documentary from the BBC, the British public broadcaster announced Friday.

"State of Georgia v. Donald J. Trump," the feature film's working title, will document the Fulton County District Attorney's office as it prosecutes a former president running to reclaim the office he lost in 2020, according to a BBC press release.

Keep reading... Show less

'Lock him up': Ex-prosecutor says Trump's political victories make jail time more likely

Former President Donald Trump's success in securing the presumptive Republican nomination make it more likely he'll be sentenced to jail time on criminal charges, a former prosecutor argued Friday.

Gregory Nolan, currently a white collar crime defense attorney, makes the legal case that Trump could and should serve jail time in a new opinion piece in Rolling Stone.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump hurled 'F-bombs' then cooed loving words​​ to aide during stress rollercoaster: book

Former President Donald Trump boomeranged between hurling F-bombs and cooing loving words in conversations with his top medical adviser during the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Anthony Fauci reportedly reveals in his new book.

Trump told Fauci he would win the 2020 election in a "f---ing landslide" no matter what "all these other f---ing people think." He added that Fauci had cost the U.S. economy “one trillion f---ing dollars," and that President Joe Biden was a "f---er" whose "a--" he was going to "kick," the Daily Beast's coverage on Fauci's new book reports.

Keep reading... Show less

'Less capable in the brain' Trump mocked by elderly voters on CNN: 'How dumb was that?'

As Donald Trump turns 78 on Friday, CNN is reporting that he is losing the battle for voters close to his age who are becoming more active about keeping him out of the Oval Office as the presidential election nears.

Case in point, Gussie Farris, 86, a retired school counselor from Grand Rapids, who told CNN's Jeff Zeleny that Trump's brash style may make him seem a lot younger than President Joe Biden.

However, she added that that is misleading.

“Because Trump is big and loud, he doesn’t come off as old as maybe Biden does, but he’s way less capable in the brain area,” she said before laughing.

“I have people that come up to me because they know I’m a Democrat and say, ‘What can I do? I have to do something, find me something to do.’ I’ve never had that happen before,” she elaborated. “They don’t want Trump. They don’t want him to be the president. And I think they’re scared. They’re worried about our democracy and what he would do.”

Keep reading... Show less

'Fell asleep a lot': Biden blasts birthday boy Trump with list of 78 'accomplishments'

Naps, bankruptcies, business failures, impeachments, lawsuits, scandals, election losses and criminal charges: Former President Donald Trump has one such "accomplishment" for every year of his life, according to President Joe Biden.

And Biden should know — he counted.

Keep reading... Show less

'Scrambled brain' Trump served notice that Taylor Swift will never ever endorse him

Former Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) rained ridicule down on Donald Trump on Friday morning while reacting to a report that the former president spent time with GOP lawmakers on Thursday obsessing over pop star Taylor Swift.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," McCaskill laughed at Trump and the assembled GOP lawmakers who were seen in a clip clapping like trained seals for the now-convicted felon who will likely be the Republican party's presidential nominee in November.

McCaskill took particular delight that, at a time when Republicans should be concerned with winning back the White House, Trump seems obsessed with wishing Swift liked him.

RELATED: GOP lawmakers compared to 'giddy' Taylor Swift fans after 'painful' Trump meeting

Speaking with the hosts, she laughed as she said, "Donald Trump got in front of members of Congress and wanted to talk about whether Taylor Swift was going to endorse him. I mean, that's just weird! I mean, that is a scrambled brain."

"First of all , under no set of circumstances is Taylor Swift ever going to endorse Donald Trump ever!" she continued echoing Swift's hit, "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" that contains the line, "But we are never, ever, ever, ever getting back together. Like, ever."

Keep reading... Show less

'Human gaffe machine': Trump's inner circle frantic as they clean up another mess

On the heels of Donald Trump's attack on Milwaukee as a "horrible city" just weeks before the Republican National Convention will be held there, MSNBC's Joe Scarborough suggested that the former president's inner circle would prefer he not speak off the cuff because he's a "human gaffe machine."

MSNBC "Way Too Early" host Jonathan Lemire kicked off the discussion by telling the "Morning Joe" panel, "This is an odd strategy, to attack the biggest city in the largest battleground state in this election. I wonder what he has in store for Philadelphia, Atlanta, Phoenix, Detroit — just go after all of them."

"This is what the Biden campaign has been looking for: Trump out of the courtroom, back on the trail, making news, and making news that hurts him. This was an own goal, if you will, yesterday in D.C." he added.

"Well, and this is why, of course, the Trump campaign wanted Donald Trump to stay in the courthouse," host Scarborough remarked. "They didn't want him on the campaign trail. They don't want him on Capitol Hill because he says really stupid things. He is a human gaffe machine."

READ MORE: 'Bring your felon to work day': Dems slam Trump-D.C. visit as GOP enjoys 'mandatory fun'

Keep reading... Show less