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2024 Elections

'Badly reasoned': Group vows to appeal after Michigan judge lets Trump stay on ballot

Democracy defender Free Speech for People said Tuesday that it would "immediately" appeal a Michigan court's refusal to disqualify former U.S. President Donald Trump from office due to his role in fomenting the January 6, 2021 Capitol insurrection.

Free Speech for People's lawsuit, which was filed in late September, argues that Trump—currently the front-runner for the 2024 GOP nomination—is ineligible to hold public office under a constitutional provision known as the insurrectionist disqualification clause.

Enacted after the Civil War, Section 3 of the 14th Amendment bars from public office anyone who has taken an oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution but then participates in an insurrection or rebellion against the United States. No criminal conviction is required for the clause to apply.

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'Donald Trump has outmaneuvered Democrats': Expert analyzes ex-president's latest TV move

Donald Trump has outfoxed the Dems, a former prosecutor said on Tuesday.

Trump's latest interview with cable channel Univision represents the former president's efforts to outmaneuver Joe Biden, according to former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance.

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'Dehumanizing your targets': Authoritarian expert explains Trump's 'vermin' speech

Former President Donald Trump's Veterans Day speech denouncing his political opponents as "vermin" to be "rooted out" sparked a fresh wave of fears about the United States backsliding into authoritarianism should he manage to win office once more.

New York University professor and authoritarianism expert Ruth Ben-Ghiat emphasized that risk strongly in an interview with MSNBC's Chris Hayes on Tuesday evening.

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'Full-flung fascism': Columnist raises alarm on Trump's change in rhetoric

Former President Donald Trump is seeking a dangerous agenda that could uproot American democracy, warned columnist Scot Lehigh in the Boston Globe on Tuesday.

This comes amid a broader uproar over Trump's reported plans for a second term, including purging the civil service and replacing it with loyalists — with the Heritage Foundation helping him to recruit his new footsoldiers and build a Christian nationalist blueprint for reshaping the government — and as he amps up dehumanizing rhetoric, describing left-wing opponents as "vermin" to be rooted out in a Veterans Day speech.

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Republican congressman un-retires a day after announcing his retirement

The career plans of Rep. Pat Fallon (R-TX) appear to be in a state of flux this week, as he made moves to leave Congress at the end of his current term — but then went back on it.

On Monday, Fallon, a lawmaker elected in 2020 to a North Texas seat vacated when former President Donald Trump tapped Rep. John Ratcliffe for Director of National Intelligence, filed to run for Texas State Senate District 30, the seat he had held before being elected to Congress. "At the end of the day, the decision came down to, If we lose Texas, we lose the nation," Fallon told The Texas Tribune. "It’s just terribly important to ensure that Texas has written a great success story and I want to keep moving that forward."

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Fani Willis says Trump's trial won't conclude before election

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis revealed Tuesday that she does not expect Donald Trump's election interference case to wrap up until after the 2024 election.

Willis made the remarks in an interview at The Washington Post Live's Global Women's Summit.

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Steve Bannon confirms official plans for 'Trump Davidians' cult merchandise

Right-wing podcast host Steve Bannon confirmed on Tuesday that he plans to sell merchandise promoting a "Trump Davidians" movement.

ABC correspondent Jonathan Karl first reported on MSNBC that Bannon planned to sell swag with the "Trump Davidians" logo. The slogan refers to the Branch Davidian religious cult that had a deadly standoff with ATF agents in 1993.

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Senate hopeful Hill Harper reports no income or bank account, despite self-funded campaign

WASHINGTON― Hill Harper, the actor and author running for Michigan's open U.S. Senate seat as a Democrat, filed a key disclosure form last week claiming that he earned no income last year or during the first 10 months of 2023.

What also makes the report remarkable is that Harper, who stars in the ABC drama "The Good Doctor," didn't list owning any bank accounts or holding any stocks, bonds, money market funds or cryptocurrency ― though he has touted the benefits of the digital currency and even founded a crypto trading platform in 2021.

Trump bragged that German leader said his crowd sizes were as big as Hitler's: reporter

A Republican member of Congress "close to Donald Trump" relayed a story to ABC News reporter Jonathan Karl for his new book Tired of Winning in which Trump was compared to Adolf Hitler by the German chancellor — and took it as a point of pride.

Reading the clip of the story, MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace recalled that it was always assumed Trump was simply too stupid to know or understand the language he was using was echoing that of Hitler. But Karl's book makes it clear he knows exactly what he's doing, and he loves the idea of being a "big, strong leader," she said.

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Tim Scott critics pounce after he leaves staffers high and dry by pulling plug on campaign

Sen Tim Scott's surprise announcement on Fox News late Sunday that he is suspending his moribund bid to be the Republican Party's 2024 presidential nominee was greeted by shock from his staffers — and no small amount of amusement by critics of the South Carolina Republican.

Appearing with former Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC) Scott, who trailed far behind Donald Trump in the polls and never moved the needle despite months of campaigning, told Gowdy, "When I go back to Iowa it will not be as a presidential candidate. The voters, who are the most remarkable people on the planet … They’re telling me, ‘Not now, Tim.’ I don’t think they’re saying, Trey, ‘no,’ but I do think they’re saying, ‘not now.’”

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Supreme Court under the gun to save the country from another Jan. 6: law professor

As multiple states investigate the premise that the 14th Amendment could keep Donald Trump off of their 2024 general election ballot, Bruce Ackerman, a professor of law and political science at Yale, implored the Supreme Court to jump into the fray as soon as possible because it could prevent another Jan. 6-type rebellion.

In a column for Slate, Ackerman made the case that no matter how courts in states like Colorado and Minnesota rule, the Supreme Court will inevitably be put on the spot to provide a definitive ruling on what constitutes an "insurrection or rebellion" that can preclude a citizen from running for office.

According to the law professor, the sooner the Supreme Court makes a ruling, the better.

As he explained, "Normally, the justices would take months to consider the merits of such an important issue and reach a decision only in June 2024, at the end of their present term. Nevertheless, it would be a tragic mistake for the court to delay its decision when the two cases arrive on its docket."

Admitting he does not expect a unanimous ruling from the fractious court, he warned the biggest risk would be the application of different standards in different states which would throw the country into chaos.

"In some of the states, Trump will run as the Republican candidate. In others, the GOP will designate a stand-in candidate in its effort to deprive Biden of an Electoral College majority on Election Day," he predicted. "Such a three-candidate race will culminate in a shattering tragedy on Jan. 20, 2025, when the next president is required to take the oath 'to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.'"

He added, "In short, when the Colorado and Minnesota cases arrive in Washington, the Supreme Court will confront a desperate race against time. If it fails to decide the cases rapidly, it will provoke a constitutional crisis once the polls close and each state decides who won the election."

Short of that, he suggested Republicans could make a case that Trump was deprived of the ability to be part of a fair election even if President Joe Biden wins by an overwhelming margin.

As he explained, Republicans "...will emphasize that the states that disqualified Trump had prevented their voters from showing that they vastly preferred him to Biden. Instead, the best they could do was to vote for his proxy, who lacked Trump’s magnetic appeal. As a consequence, House Republicans will claim that they are defending democracy in deploying the “one state, one vote” rule on behalf of Trump—since he would have won the popular vote on a nationwide basis if Americans had been given a nationwide chance to express their support for him in his campaign against Biden."

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Trump issues sinister threat to 'root out' leftists if elected in 2024

Former U.S. President Donald Trump pledged during a Veterans Day speech on Saturday to "root out" those he described as "radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country" if he's elected in 2024, an openly fascistic threat that drew comparisons to Nazi rhetoric.

"We are a failing nation. We are a nation in serious decline," Trump, the current Republican presidential frontrunner, told the crowd gathered in Claremont, New Hampshire. "2024 is our final battle."

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Ex-conservative blasts media for not covering the threat to democracy — again

Columnist Jennifer Rubin, who describes herself as an ex-conservative, blasted the media on Sunday, saying that they're ignoring the threat to democracy that is coming again in the election.

At issue is the recent polling showing that President Joe Biden's poll numbers were down as he kicks off his 2024 campaign. Trump announced his campaign on Nov. 16, 2022. It brought the media together to endless conversations about Biden stepping out of the race. There's no evidence of it, and it isn't a reality, but the media still reported it.

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