2024 Elections

Watch: Furious MSNBC host confronts Trump ally Byron Donalds over president elect's plans

A visibly fuming José Díaz-Balart hammered Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) on Wednesday morning after Donald Trump's presidential win, peppering the MAGA lawmaker with questions about what the president-elect has in store with America's immigrants.

During the tense interview, Donalds bluntly stated that the convicted felon Trump intends to follow the law and will quickly move to expel immigrants deemed to be criminals while making no allowances for immigrants who have been in the country for years.

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Potential Trump cabinet member gives first insights into his health priorities

Former left-wing conspiracy theorist turned Trump ally Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has big plans now that the twice-impeached former president is now heading back to the White House.

NPR's Steve Inskeep reports that Kennedy told him during an interview on Wednesday that the new Trump administration "will recommend getting fluoride out of drinking water" and will also provide consumers with more "information" about vaccines.

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Trump's A.G. Bill Barr speaks out against president-elect's criminal cases after victory

Former attorney general Bill Barr called on the Department of Justice to drop the criminal cases against Donald Trump.

The former president has already promised to fire special counsel Jack Smith immediately upon returning to the White House, but after Trump defeated Kamala Harris in the presidential election, Barr urged attorney general Merrick Garland to drop the prosecutions.

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'Put that everywhere': Steve Bannon admits 'Project 2025 is the agenda' after Trump wins

Right-wing pundits admitted that a controversial plan to reshape the country called Project 2025 is Donald Trump's agenda after he won the 2024 presidential election.

On his daily War Room podcast, host Steve Bannon agreed with conservative pundit Matt Walsh, who made the admission on social media.

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'That is wrong': MSNBC's Joe Scarborough cuts off panelist who was disparaging Harris

A rare dispute between MSNBC "Morning Joe" regulars broke out on MSNBC on Wednesday morning as co-host Joe Scarborough loudly cut off branding expert Donnie Deutsch when he attempted to claim Vice President Kamala Harris didn't connect with voters.

As part of the autopsy of the failed campaign to keep convicted felon Donald Trump out of the White House, Deutsch claimed of Harris, "I think in the most simplistic advertising format of all time: problem, solution. I think the other thing that happened is what I will just call the passion quadrant. This is, I'm talking mostly centrists, this is where the Democrats are really fractured."

"There were so many people that were passionately for Trump and passionately against Trump," he continued. "I'm talking about the voters that go back between Biden and Trump and Obama and Reagan. Then you had passionate against Trump and you didn't have as much passion for her. You never heard people go, 'Oh, I love her. it just ––."

ALSO READ: 'Bloodbath': Inside the MAGA playbook for mayhem after Election Day

"Hold on, I have to stop you there, because that is wrong," Scarborough exclaimed

"Okay, then I'm wrong, Deutsch backtracked.

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'This is why Harris lost': Ex-right-wing media insider pinpoints Democrats' fatal mistake

Matthew Sheffield, a former right-wing media insider, believes that Democrats have been making a massive mistake when it comes to waging information wars.

Writing on X, formerly Twitter, Sheffield explains that the Democrats have flat-out failed to create a media ecosystem that functions in the same way that right-wing media does by creating what he describes as a "partisan ecosystem" whose sole goal is to constantly reinforce negative partisanship among voters.

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Jan. 6 rioter seeks pause in his case due to Trump's promised pardon

Jan. 6 attacker Christopher Carnell submitted a filing to Judge Beryl Howell asking for the case to be paused until Dec. 13.

Politico legal reporter Kyle Cheney posted the court documents on Wednesday morning, saying that he expects a pardon to come.

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'Colossal injustice': CNN legal expert gives update on status of Trump criminal cases

Donald Trump won a second term in office despite four criminal indictments, 34 felony convictions and hundreds of millions of dollars in penalties, and CNN's Elie Honig explained how his election win would affect those legal cases.

The president-elect is due to be sentenced later this month for falsifying business records related to his hush money payment to adult film actress Stormy Daniels, and a judge was expected to hear arguments next month in his federal election interference case, and Honig said those matters were now up in the air after he beat Vice President Kamala Harris.

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Ex-Trump aide flags 'the only reason' president-elect's law breaking might be stopped

The "Anonymous" writer who sounded the alarm about concerns in Donald Trump's first administration is begging Republicans to line up to join the new one.

Miles Taylor, who served as chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security, penned a column for the New York Times urging conservatives "not to run from him, as some might say. Instead, I urge you to join him" ahead of Trump's return to the presidency.

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'Not just misogyny from white men': MSNBC's Morning Joe slams voters who rejected Harris

The morning after Donald Trump won a historic second term as president despite being a convicted felon and found guilty of sexual assault and defamation, MSNBC hosts Joe Scarborough and Rev. Al Sharpton teamed up to blast non-white male voters who voted against Vice President Kamala Harris.

As part of the postmortem of the election, Scarborough was quick to note polls that showed the VP did poorly with white men –– as was expected –– but also with voters who were expected to fall in behind her but voted for the former president instead.

"Kamala Harris is a woman of color in an interracial marriage running as a woman to be the head of state," Sharpton began. "That is something a lot of Americans are not ready to deal with. How we move that forward, we need to face it and deal with it and I hope we do it in a way that shows that we will be more mature than when they lost [in 2020]. There will be no January 6 insurrection from our side. It must be the maturing of America."

ALSO READ: 'Bloodbath': Inside the MAGA playbook for mayhem after Election Day

"I will just say, Rev, really quickly, too, Democrats need to be mature and they need to be honest," host Scarborough interjected. "And they need to say, yes, there is misogyny but it's not just misogyny from white me. It's misogyny from Hispanic men."

"Right," Sharpton agreed.

"It's misogyny from Black men, things we have all been talking about, who do not want a woman leading them. Might be race issues with Hispanics, they don't want a Black woman as president of the United States. You know, the Democratic party, I've always found when you're sitting around talking, they love to just sort of balkanize everybody into separate groups, and say, 'Oh, white people don't like women and Black people.' No. We've talked about this before: a lot of Hispanic voters have problems with Black candidates."

"And with other Hispanics!" Sharpton exclaimed. "You've got some that don't like each other. And some of the most misogynist things I heard going the get out the vote tour came from Black men. So you're absolutely right, it's not simplistic and we have to have real honest conversations about it."

Watch below or at the link.

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'I'm gonna finish my sentence': CNN panelists clash over Trump's appeal to Black men

Former Democratic lawmaker Bakari Sellers and GOP operative Shermichael Singleton clashed on CNN over the Republican Party's efforts to win over Black men voters.

The conservative Singleton credited the GOP's outreach efforts for Donald Trump's election win, saying Republicans promised to "put men back to work," but Sellers disagreed.

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Anti-Trump conservative highlights 'a ray of hope' in election results

Anti-Trump conservative Tom Nichols believes that there is "a ray of hope" in what he otherwise describes as a depressing victory for former President Donald Trump.

Writing in The Atlantic, Nichols makes the case that while there will be fewer guardrails on Trump in his second administration, there will be some potential political benefits to this.

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'Holy smokes!' CNN's Jake Tapper shocked by one election data point

CNN's Jake Tapper was shocked to learn a crucial data point about Kamala Harris' election loss to Donald Trump.

The former president defeated the vice president in Tuesday's election by performing better than polling suggested, and Harris was unable to build on president Joe Biden's vote count from 2020 in any single county in the nation.

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