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2024 Elections

'Fat ugly face': Trump insults Adam 'Shifty' Schiff at Iowa rally

Donald Trump on Saturday took a detour from his regular stump speech to insult Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) during his Iowa rally.

Trump, speaking at the Iowa Commit to Caucus event in Fort Dodge, was talking about his time in office when he said Iowa senators would come ask him for things and he would "take care of it for them."

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'Bunch of losers': Trump mocks ethics watchdog after 'gigantic court victory in Colorado'

Donald Trump on Saturday took a victory lap at his Iowa rally after what he described as a "gigantic court victory in Colorado" that kept him on the ballot in the state.

Trump, who earlier in the day made multiple attacks on a law clerk that he was previously barred from mentioning under a now-stayed gag order, said on stage at the Iowa Commit to Caucus event in Fort Dodge that the "fake news media" is having an "absolute meltdown" because of the decision finding that he engaged in insurrection but couldn't be blocked from the ballot.

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'Seismic' Trump insurrectionist ruling opens door for Supreme Court surprise: legal expert

The Colorado judge who handed Donald Trump a win by keeping him on the state's ballot may have set things in motion for the Supreme Court to help the plaintiffs, a former prosecutor said on Saturday.

Former federal prosecutor Harry Litman appeared on MSNBC's Yasmin Vossoughian Reports, where he was asked about the Colorado decision, which kept the ex-president on the state ballot but affirmed that he participated in insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021.

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Jack Smith 'chess move' could place Judge Cannon under new scrutiny: expert

Jack Smith could make a strategic move that would place the Trump-appointed Judge Cannon on higher scrutiny in connection with her rulings in the ex-president's criminal prosecution over sensitive documents allegedly hoarded away at Mar-a-Lago, a former prosecutor said on Saturday.

Charles Coleman, a former Brooklyn, New York, prosecutor, appeared on MSNBC and was asked about Judge Cannon's recent scheduling moves that some say are designed to delay the former president's criminal trial beyond the 2024 election.

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'A get-out-of-jail-free card for insurrection': CO secretary of state ​rips Trump ruling

Colorado Secretary of State Jenna Griswold (D) blasted District Judge Sarah B. Wallace on MSNBC on Saturday morning for agreeing that Donald Trump participated in an insurrection against the United States government but that it did not preclude him from running to be the commander in chief once again.

Appearing on MSNBC with host Ali Velshi less than 24 hours after Wallace issued her ruling that some constitutional scholars called "preposterous" and "bizarre," a visibly upset Griswold accused the jurist of giving Trump a free pass.

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CO judge's 'bizarro' Trump eligibility ruling ripped apart by constitutional law experts

A ruling by District Judge Sarah Wallace requiring that the Colorado secretary of state must place Donald Trump on the state's primary ballot next year, because he is not ineligible according to her reading of the 14th Amendment, was ripped apart by two constitutional law scholars appearing on MSNBC on Saturday morning.

Former federal Judge Michael Luttig and constitutional law expert Laurence Tribe spoke with host Ali Velshi less than 24 hours after the ruling came down where Wallace agreed the former president took part in the Jan. 6 insurrection but didn't feel he was covered by wording in Section Three that would bar him from running for office.

According to Tribe, the judge made an "egregious error" in her ruling which Tribe also labeled as "bizzaro."

"The court did egregiously error in holding that the office of the president is not an office under the United States, turning constitutional interpretation upside down, by finding the unambiguous text of Section Three ambiguous because of a sliver of debate history that is not only itself ambiguous, but is rendered singularly unpersuasive by other exchanges in the debate history," Luttig explained. "That reflects the understanding that the office of president is of course an office under the United States, from which a person can be disqualified by Section Three."

"You suggested that this was a narrow interpretation of section three," he told the MSNBC host. "It is that and more. It is the narrowest possible interpretation of Section Three, it's the interpretation urged on the court by the former president's lawyers. But it's simply incorrect as a matter of constitutional law."

ALSO READ: What is Trump planning if he gets a second term? Be worried. Be really worried.

Tribe added, "In paragraph 100 of the opinion, she [Judge Wallace] concludes he knew he [Trump] lost the election. so what accounts for this bizarre, actually, bizarro upside-down holding that the highest office in the land, the one of the greatest power, the one whose danger to the republic is at its maximum, would somehow be exempt?"

"That the judge herself says, she admits that sounds preposterous, that's her word," he continued. "She says it would carry the preposterous application that Jefferson Davis, who took an oath to the Constitution, before becoming a senator, then became a senator, then turned on the Constitution, then became a Confederate and the president of the Confederacy, that he could then become president of the post civil war United States?"

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Sinema’s fundraising continues to lag in contested Arizona Senate race

This article originally appeared in OpenSecrets. Sign up for their weekly newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) raised over three times as much money as Sen. Krysten Sinema (I-Ariz.) last quarter in his bid to unseat the incumbent senator. He has inched closer to matching Sinema’s war chest each quarter since announcing his candidacy for Arizona’s Senate seat in January.

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'It's childish': Multiple GOPers considering bailing Congress over House 'dysfunction'

Republican party control of the House after the 2024 election is growing more tenuous due to more "despondent" GOP lawmakers eyeing the exit after a tumultuous session highlighted by the ouster of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) by a faction led by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL).

According to a new report from Politico, multiple House GOPers have already announced they are stepping away for a variety of reasons while others are eyeing jobs outside the government or an opening in the less chaotic Senate.

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2024 GOP hopefuls compete for evangelicals’ support at forum RNC warned them not to attend

Republican presidential candidates shared personal stories about their faith, their opposition to abortion and their support of Israel at the Family Leader’s Presidential Thanksgiving Forum in Des Moines Friday, hoping to win evangelical Iowans’ support in the 2024 Iowa caucuses.

Three candidates, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, participated in the roundtable discussion. Only two other candidates who were invited did not appear: U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, who dropped out of the race Sunday, and former President Donald Trump.

The former president, who holds a significant lead over his Republican rivals, has skipped the majority of “cattle call” events in Iowa as well as the Republican National Committee’s presidential debates where he would appear alongside other candidates. Instead, he typically holds his own, separate events, and this Saturday he plans to hold a rally in Fort Dodge.

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DeSantis claims Trump 'couldn't spell' his demeaning nickname if he was 'put to the test'

Ron DeSantis is challenging the the former POTUS to take his juvenile name calling back to grade school.

Republican presidential hopefuls Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy talked about their faith and tackling Trump during a Family Leader’s Presidential Thanksgiving Forum in Des Moines, Iowa, ahead of the state caucuses.

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'Curious legal ruling': Legal expert says she was 'caught off guard' by Colorado decision

In her ruling to keep former president Donald Trump on the 2024 ballot in Colorado, the judge confirmed that he indeed committed insurrection back on Jan. 6 when he revved up a crowd to "Stop The Steal" — but he wasn't an officer of the U.S.

That's the takeaway that former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance is left with in what she described as an odd ruling during an appearance on MSNBC's "The Last Word" with Lawrence O'Donnell on Friday.

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'Not a fan of President Trump': Ex-president's lawyer slams judge that handed him a win

An insurrectionist can run for president.

Former President Donald Trump will be permitted to stay on the primary ballot in Colorado after District Judge Sarah Wallace concluded he committed an insurrection back on Jan. 6, 2021, by inciting a mob to prevent the certification of the presidential election where he lost — but shot down some state voters' attempt to invoke the 14th Amendment from banishing him from holding office again.

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'Trump engaged in insurrection': Jenna Ellis points to overlooked Colorado finding

Former President Donald Trump appeared to catch a break on Friday when a Colorado state judge dismissed a lawsuit seeking to disqualify him from office under the Insurrection Clause of the 14th Amendment — a decision that comes off of judges in Minnesota and Michigan dispatching of similar cases in those states.

But not so fast, wrote Trump's former legal strategist Jenna Ellis in a post on her social media account. The judge in fact didn't hand Trump a totally clean victory.

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