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2024 Elections

'Huge loophole': Trump-appointed FEC officials paved way for RNC to pay his legal fees

The cash-strapped Republican National Committee (RNC) continues to trail its Democratic counterpart in campaign fundraising. But a new rule recently passed by GOP-friendly officials on the Federal Election Commission (FEC) may end up being a critical lifeline for Republicans this election cycle.

According to the Daily Beast, three Republican members of the FEC appointed during former President Donald Trump's administration recently passed an obscure ruling that effectively approved the expenditure of RNC funds on the ex-president's legal bills. The Beast's Roger Sollenberger and Mini Racker wrote that the rule allows for the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) — the GOP's campaign arm for U.S. Senate races — to divert funds from its legal/recount account toward any overt campaign ad buy, provided that money raised from those ads eventually went back into the legal account.

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'Shame on you': Franklin Graham torched online for siding with Trump in criminal case

Evangelist Franklin Graham was criticized by political experts and onlookers on Friday after he explicitly sided with Donald Trump in the former president's ongoing criminal trial in New York.

"Pray for former President [Trump]," he wrote on social media. "His enemies want to do everything they can to destroy him, to put him in jail, or to drag out this trial to prevent him from campaigning. I’m not telling you to vote for him—I’m asking you to pray for him."

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'This is a bad look': Trump said to be hurting his election chances with criminal trial

Former President Donald Trump has just gone through the first week of his criminal hush payment trial in Manhattan — and it's already hurting him politically, said commentator Molly Jong-Fast on MSNBC's "Deadline: White House" on Friday evening.

The conventional wisdom for months has been that the Trump trials, and particularly the Manhattan trial, will not significantly impact him, with large numbers of voters simply not caring about it. But this ignores that a great many non-Trump supporters would need to vote for Trump to get him elected — and, Jong-Fast said, this trial makes it less likely.

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'Tread carefully': MTG warned of evangelical fury over her attacks against their champion

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) is risking a growing revolt by a faction of her most ardent supporters who are furious she is trying to take down House Speaker Michael Johnson (R-LA), whom they regard as their Christian champion in Congress, according to a report.

Greene, despite all of her marital difficulties, has long made her Christianity a central part of her appeal to conservatives, but she lacks the longtime ties to the evangelical community that Johnson can brag about and, if push comes to shove, she may find herself on the outside if she succeeds in ousting him from his speakership.

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'Giant time-suck': Trump's trial is already crippling his ability to campaign

Based on just three days in the courtroom where Donald Trump is facing 34 felony counts related to hush-money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 presidential election, campaign advisers and GOP consultants are already dealing with the crippling effect it is having on his 2024 presidential bid.

Pointing to the four days a week the former president must be in the courtroom or face possible jailing, Trump's inner circle is watching President Joe Biden move about the country and raise massive amounts of campaign cash while the ex-president is limited to using his Truth Social platform and making proclamations on the courthouse steps.

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GOP candidate 'snitched on himself' by whining about New York Times story on his childhood

Republican Senate candidate David McCormick is outraged over an upcoming New York Times article he says contains "frivolous lies" about his childhood.

McCormick, who just last month was ridiculed after bragging that his wife was on the board of Exxon, posted about the journalistic inquiry in a Thursday explainer on social media.

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Charlie Kirk-linked GOP lawmaker ends re-election bid after complaint he forged signatures

Far-right Arizona state Rep. Austin Smith is ending his re-election bid after being caught forging petition signatures to qualify for the ballot.

According to Yvonne Wingett Sanchez of The Washington Post, "State Rep. Austin Smith (R) — who was senior director at Turning Point Action, the campaign arm of Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA — was accused by a Democratic activist of submitting petition sheets with rows of voter names, addresses and signatures that 'bear a striking resemblance' to Smith’s handwriting, according to a complaint. Smith 'personally circulated multiple petition sheets bearing what appear to be forged voter signatures,' the complaint said."

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Jury selected in Trump hush money trial

A full jury has been selected for former President Donald Trump's trial for allegedly covering up a sex scandal.

New York Justice Juan Merchan seated the 12-member jury Thursday afternoon after having to dismiss two of the jurors earlier in the day.

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'Twisting my words': GOP Senate candidate denies saying elderly people shouldn't vote

Wisconsin Senate candidate Eric Hovde is unhappy that the media is covering his proliferation of MAGA election conspiracy theories.

In a new video posted to X, Hovde — a banking and real estate development executive challenging Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin — complained that news outlets were mischaracterizing his past statements about voting in nursing homes, implying that he was saying senior citizens shouldn't be allowed to vote. In reality, he said, he was just casting doubt that all the senior citizens who voted in 2020 actually did so.

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Anti-Trump Republicans target Fox News in $50M campaign to swing voters to Biden

A prominent group of Republicans who oppose Donald Trump are on a mission to convince voters who backed the former president in both 2016 and 2020 to switch their support to President Joe Biden in 2024 — and they're spending a lot of money to help in their effort.

Republican Voters Against Trump (RVAT) announced a $50 million multi-platform ad campaign that is designed "both to troll the twice-impeached, four times-indicted ex-president and to genuinely reach out to his most loyal supporters," according to a report from The Independent.

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Another House Republican to quit citing Capitol Hill 'dysfunction'

Another Republican announced Thursday he's leaving the House and heading home.

Rep. Jake LaTurner (R-KS) declared his decision not to seek reelection in the fall in a public statement on X that both acknowledged and downplayed criticisms that his party has spurred chaos in the House of Representatives.

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'A little dicey': Ethics experts raise eyebrows at latest Trump campaign spending tactics

Donors to Donald Trump's 2024 presidential campaign are not only helping to pay his massive legal bills as he faces an onslaught of criminal charges but they are also helping prop up his businesses at a time when he is facing financial difficulties.

According to new campaign filings, reported on by USA Today's Zac Anderson and Erin Mansfield, four checks written between February and March went to Trump's Mar-a-Lago and Trump National Doral Miami for nearly a half million dollars from his joint campaign committee.

That has some ethics experts claiming the former president is pushing the envelope by enriching himself with donor cash.

ALSO READ: 15 worthless things Trump will give you for your money

This is not something new, as the report notes that "the Trump campaign and affiliated political committees paid businesses owned by Trump at least $4.9 million since the start of 2023, according to an analysis by USA TODAY. Most of that money – $4.1 million – went to TAG Air, Inc. for air travel.

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From 'really rich' to begging: Inside Trump's U-turn on one of his first campaign lies

During his 2016 campaign, Donald Trump talked a big game about how he was a “really rich” man who would be self-funding his first presidential run.

“I don’t need anybody’s money,” Trump said in his June 6, 2015 campaign announcement speech and again in an August 2015 interview in Iowa.

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