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2024 Elections

How a Trump conviction would throw the GOP convention into chaos

With Donald Trump all but assured to win enough Republican Party delegates to be awarded the party's 2024 presidential nomination, his legal problems could throw a wrench in the works before conservatives descend on Milwaukee in mid-July.

According to a report from USA Today's David Jackson, while it appears the votes are there the path is still littered with potholes including the very real possibility he would be convicted before the convention begins.

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Trump’s escalating racist rhetoric and the far right’s plan for a slow civil war

As the 2024 presidential election campaign heats up, Republican front-runner Donald Trump is escalating his racist rhetoric, repeatedly saying in recent days that immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country,” drawing comparisons to Hitler. Journalist Jeff Sharlet says, “Even more important than the substance is the spectacle, the drama, that makes him the exciting and, in fascist terms, the man of action.” Sharlet explains Project 2025, an agency-by-agency plan backed by a coalition of conservative groups for implementing fascism if Trump regains power, and how the former president is giving the far right the national stage they’ve always wanted.


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Swifties to the polls? Why all eyes are on Taylor ahead of 2024

As Joe Biden's poll numbers flag ahead of next year's election, it might seem obvious for the president to look to the pop-star billionaire who endorsed him in 2020, and whose every move is endlessly cataloged by US media.

It's a fact his campaign knows all too well.

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Former GOP staffer burns Republicans for hypocrisy over Colorado top court's Trump ruling

Conservatives who are upset that the Colorado Supreme Court blocked Donald Trump from the state's GOP primary ballot have a serious hypocrisy problem, a former GOP staffer said on Saturday.

Kurt Bardella, a former staffer for Republican Senator Olympia Snowe and Republican Congressman Darrell Issa, appeared on MSNBC's Ayman, where he was asked about the Colorado case. He drew a connection between the Supreme Court's task in this case and the one that decided the 2000 election.

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Rand Paul roasts Trump for trying to remove Obama from ballot over birth certificate claim

Donald Trump's chickens are coming home to roost with recent attempts to remove him from the ballot, GOP Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky said on Saturday.

Paul, who has been a staunch Trump defender after initially being critical, opened up about the former president in a holiday-inspired post. The post wasn't about Christmas or Hanukkah, however; it was about Festivus, inspired by a Seinfeld storyline.

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Trump fans cheer support from Nation of Islam's Farrakhan — but the video is old

A pro-Trump influencer who recently interviewed Tucker Carlson celebrated on Saturday that the former president got the "nod" from Nation of Islam leader Minister Louis Farrakhan, but the video dates back to at least 2018, according to various news reports.

Tim Pool, who recently got Carlson to say that he wouldn't support Trump if Nikki Haley was the V.P. on the ticket, posted on social media that "Trump got the farrakhan nod." With that caption, Pool shared someone else's video in which Farrakhan is seen praising Trump and calling him an "anomaly."

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Lauren Boebert's 'improper behavior' causing her challenger to gain endorsements: report

Colorado GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert could be sweating recent news that her own "improper behavior," such as being kicked out of a musical after vaping and fondling, is causing her Republican challenger to gain more endorsements and bring in even more cash.

Boebert, who at first denied vaping in the theater but ultimately apologized after security footage revealed her conduct, is facing an intra-party challenge from Grand Junction attorney Jeff Hurd. Boebert has been bleeding support for months after being politically "wounded" by her own antics and scandals.

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Political expert shows how Trump's campaign could be 'finished within the next two weeks'

Donald Trump's presidential campaign could be two weeks from being over, a political strategist argues.

The former president was hit with some bad election news recently when the Colorado Supreme Court took the unprecedented move of striking him from the state's GOP primary ballot because he "engaged in insurrection" with his actions leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot.

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D.C. Appeals Court could throw Trump a curveball with SCOTUS out of the way: expert

Reflecting on the Supreme Court's curt denial of special counsel Jack Smith's filing to intercede at the earliest date and rule on whether presidential immunity should be extended to Donald Trump's actions before and during the Jan. 6 riot, former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance presented a "fantasy scenario" that would create problems for the former president's legal team.

On her Civil Discourse Substack platform, Vance pointed out that Trump's attempt to slow-walk his multiple trials with "frivolous" motions that stand no chance of being successful are at the heart of his legal team's strategy. But the judges seated on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit could make their ruling quickly while at the same time giving Judge Tanya Chutkan the go-ahead to proceed with her schedule.

As Vance noted, Chutkan's trial of Trump is dead in the water due to a stay from the court while it considers the issue of presidential immunity and how it applies to Trump's actions.

In her "fantasy scenario," Vance claimed the judges could lift the stay which would take away the ability of Trump to stall his appeal to the Supreme Court and delay the proceedings even more.

"The fantasy scenario obviously depends on a lot of things going right, and it’s too early to have any sense about whether this is even a possibility," the former prosecutor conceded. "Although the court of appeals is on a fast track, we don’t know how long it will take them to issue a decision. Trump will presumably play out the time to ask for rehearing to the full extent possible."

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She suggested, "The court could, perhaps, decide a stay was no longer warranted and permit Judge Chutkan to restart her pretrial proceedings, which could incentivize Trump to move more quickly, but again, there are a lot of different considerations involved and no certainties. The most honest conclusion I can give you tonight is that we just don’t know for sure how the schedule will shape up."

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Trump's insurrection 'due process' complaints burned to the ground by legal expert

Complaints by Donald Trump and his allies that he should be allowed to remain on ballots in multiple states contesting his eligibility because he has been denied "due process" was dismantled by a former U.S. attorney on Saturday morning.


Speaking with host Ali Velshi, former prosecutor Barbara McQuade claimed there is a basic misunderstanding about how "due process" is applied and that the former president and his defenders have it all wrong when they complain that he has not been found to be an "insurrectionist."

"There is now this growing record of legal opinions affirming that what happened on January 6th wasn't insurrection," host Velshi prompted. "The Supreme Court, ultimately I think, is going to have to at some point or another address that particular question."

McQuade argued with the conventional wisdom about how the law arrives at a determination of insurrection.

"I think one of the things that was important about the litigation was there was a trial," she reminded the MSNBC host. "There was an actual fact-finding mission. They heard testimony from members of Congress who were there as well as experts, who reached that decision. I think it is very important for both history and for this case."

"There are those complaining that Donald Trump has been denied due process in some way," she began. "But I think they're conflating a finding of a criminal violation of insurrection, it is a crime to engage in insurrection, where you have due process rights like the right to confront your accusers, the right to testify, the right to cross-examine witnesses. But that is when one's liberty is at stake."

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'Ask Jeb Bush': Former GOP lawmaker breaks news to DeSantis his career is over

On Saturday morning, former Rep. Dave Jolly (R-FL) laughed when told how far Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) is trailing Donald Trump in the race to be the 2024 Republican party presidential nominee and then noted that DeSantis' career in politics is coming to an ignominious and abrupt end.

With the Florida governor ineligible by state law to run for a third term, and the state already represented by two Republicans in the U.S. Senate, Jolly said DeSantis jumped the gun on starting his national career by taking on the former president who has the solid backing of the MAGA faithful.

With that in mind, the former GOP lawmaker said DeSantis is headed down the same road traveled by former Govs. Jeb Bush (R-FL) and Mike Huckabee (R-AR), both of whom launched humiliatingly bad presidential bids that failed.

"Why is Ron Desantis still in the race?" host Jonathan Capehart pressed, which set Jolly off laughing.

"Exactly, Jonathan. I heard that clip and I thought, 'Okay, we've now reached the excuses stage of his political campaign,' which is always the last one before withdrawal," Jolly stated while smirking.

"Look, the storyline on Ron Desantis is this, and on Saturday morning we can be light-hearted about it, but Republicans jumped into a hot and heavy dating relationship with him. He was the prom king. He was, Time magazine said, the future. His opening ad said on the eighth day God created him: Ron DeSantis."

ALSO READ: Florida judge’s son is a neo-Nazi patron: data leak

"And so they jumped into this heavy dating relationship with him, they thought he was all that — they realized he wasn't," he continued. "That he was just into himself and not into them. He was a little boring, he had lost his moves, he was stale. Republican voters have moved on and, just like a bad boyfriend, Ron DeSantis doesn't realize that."

After noting that former Gov. Nikki Haley (R-SC) has blown by the Florida governor in the polls, he added, "Ron DeSantis' presidential run is likely over. The question is, is his political career over as well? Because where does he go after leaving the governorship? Ask Jeb Bush and Mike Huckabee how that went. It doesn't go well."

Watch below or at the link:

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Does Colorado decision impact Trump’s eligibility in Maine? Trump says no, challengers yes

Those challenging former President Donald Trump’s primary election eligibility in Maine see the decision out of the Colorado Supreme Court this week as validation of their argument and urge Maine to reach an identical ruling.

Trump’s counsel says the Colorado decision isn’t relevant, arguing that decision is not “final” and that Maine challenges are a separate matter since they were brought under different state laws and procedures.

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Trump winning GOP nod would tell us all we need to know about Republican voters: historian

Legendary presidential historian Jon Meacham spoke with MSNBC's Stephanie Ruhle on Friday evening about 2023 in retrospective — and the significance of former President Donald Trump's continued hold over the Republican Party.

"If you were to write a book about this year, what would you include?" said Ruhle.

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