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2024 Elections

Lawyers demand Freedom Caucus chair stop putting Trump's name on yard signs

Former President Donald Trump demanded Friday that the House Freedom Caucus chairman get off his political lawn, according to a new report.

Trump campaign attorney David Warrington on Friday sent Rep. Bob Good (R-VA) a cease and desist letter over yard signs that bear both his and Trump's names, according to Punchbowl News congressional reporter Mica Soellner,

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'Bungled': Legal expert breaks down the 'significant' errors' that doomed Trump

When jury deliberations in Donald Trump's criminal hush money trial got underway in a Lower Manhattan courthouse on Wednesday, some legal experts expected deliberations to continue into June. But the following day, late in the afternoon, the jurors handed down their verdict and found Trump guilty on all 34 of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's criminal counts.

Trump is now the first former president in United States history to be convicted on criminal charges. Justice Juan Merchan has set July 11 — only four days before the start of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee — for sentencing.

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'Sleaze bag' rant against trial witness makes jail even more likely for Trump: analyst

Donald Trump risked jail time Friday when he railed against a witness in the historic criminal hush money trial that transformed the former president into a convicted felon, according to CNN correspondent Kristen Holmes.

Trump's rambling speech from the lobby of his eponymous tower in New York City included multiple digs at a "sleaze bag" witness which Holmes suggested violated a gag order, still in place, from Justice Juan Merchan.

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'Enfeebled, confused narcissist': Hits keep coming after Trump's conviction speech

Donald Trump took a brutal beating online Friday as he went on a meandering speech the morning after his felony conviction.

Trump spoke for more than 30 minutes, rambling about many of the same things he's said at his campaign rallies. Attacking immigrants, Trump spoke about the Chinese before quickly pivoting to other issues – including many references to the unfairness of his trial.

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Jim Jordan summons Alvin Bragg to congressional hearing over Trump's criminal conviction

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) wants answers from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg about the felony conviction of former President Donald Trump.

The Ohio Republican plans to demand Bragg and senior counsel Matthew Colangelo appear before the House select subcommittee on the weaponization of the federal government on June 13 for a hearing, according to an X announcement made Friday.

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'Big if true:' Pundits laugh as Trump declares judge 'literally crucified' witnesses

Former President Donald Trump, a newly convicted felon, said Friday that witnesses were "literally crucified" by the "devil" who looks "so nice and soft" and oversaw his criminal hush money trial.

The presumptive Republican presidential nominee delivered this message from the lobby of Trump Tower in New York City where he has been found guilty of falsifying business records to conceal hush money payments ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

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‘That's the Kool-Aid’: Republicans triple down on Trump the morning after guilty verdict

WASHINGTON — Here, on Trump’s Morning After, Republicans are feeling bullish. That’s right. On the right — today’s new right, that is — former President Donald Trump’s guilty verdict is seen as a boon for the GOP.

While the GOP could use this week’s historic guilty verdict to break up with the man who co-opted their party back in 2016, it doesn’t seem Republicans are ready to go back to their Reaganesque conservative roots. Instead, they’re tripling down on Trump and betting that his personal brand of populism will carry the party to victory come November.

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Trump claims $34.8M fundraising haul after guilty verdict

Donald Trump's 2024 campaign team told reporters he raked in $34.8 million from donors on Thursday after the guilty verdict in his felony trial was read.

The money was mainly from small dollar donors, with reporters claiming it was one of the most lucrative 24 hours for campaign fundraising yet for the Trump campaign.

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U.S. election stumbles into new territory after Trump verdict

Torn apart and rewired by Donald Trump's historic criminal conviction, the 2024 presidential campaign moves into uncharted territory Friday with all eyes on how the two main protagonists navigate the dangers.

Trump wasted no time in shifting from courtroom to campaign mode.

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Trump warns Republicans not to 'siphon money' from him by fundraising off convictions

Donald Trump made history on Thursday when he was convicted of more than 30 felonies in New York. He then immediately went on a fundraising spree in which he cast himself as a victim of a rigged system.

But putting his own fundraisers out after the guilty verdict wasn't enough, according to a new report. He's now warning fellow Republicans to keep away, Politico reported.

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'Most powerful thing': Witness details Trump's last moments before 'shocking' verdict

NEW YORK CITY — An artist who has attended nearly every day of former President Donald Trump's criminal hush money trial sat in rapt as attention as the guilty verdicts started rolling in, she told Raw Story in a phone interview Thursday.

Jessica Jarva, who goes by her artist's name Jarvaland, spent a tense day waiting in the courtroom with Trump for a verdict.

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Revealed: Truth Social developed 'contingency plan' for Trump being convicted of felonies

Former President Donald Trump's media company crafted a "contingency plan" to keep operating without disruption in the event that the former president was convicted of a felony, reported Forbes on Thursday.

It's a plan they could now have to put into action, with the former president convicted on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the Manhattan hush money case.

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'Go eat': MAGA piles on GOP Senate candidate after he urges 'respect' for Trump verdict

Former President Donald Trump's conviction in the felony hush payment case in Manhattan predictably led to a firestorm of condemnation and recriminations against the legal system by Republican officeholders across the country — but in some cases, it also led to a civil war against the few Republicans who had any words of caution.

That was laid bare vividly on Thursday for former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, now the Republican nominee for Senate in that state.

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