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2024 Elections

Biden camp rails against DeSantis, ‘extremist’ Republicans in Miami ahead of debate

MIAMI — President Joe Biden’s top campaign officials and leading Florida Democrats on Tuesday went after Republicans in Miami for Florida’s rising cost of living and increasingly conservative social agenda under the leadership of Gov. Ron DeSantis, offering an early look at how they plan to take on the GOP in Florida next year. The remarks during a press conference at a union office by Biden’s campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez and other Democratic officials — including the governor of Illinois — came a day before five Republican presidential hopefuls descend upon the city for the third G...

Republicans who have spent years lying about 'rigged' elections now need your vote to win

She told you the 2020 election was rigged. She claimed that thousands of “illegal ballots” counted in 2022 meant that your vote didn’t matter.

And now she wants you to vote for her in 2024.

Kari Lake, the leading Republican candidate for U.S. senator from Arizona, spent the last year fighting unsuccessful court battles to overturn her 17,000-vote loss in the 2022 governor’s race to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs. Lake spent much of that campaign as a leading purveyor of the “Big Lie” that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from Donald Trump, who showered her with praise in 2022 and has now endorsed her Senate bid.

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Sudden sunlight: GOP House hopeful reveals personal finances after Raw Story investigation

A Republican congressional candidate in one of the nation's most competitive 2024 House races has publicly disclosed his personal finances, as required by federal law, after a Raw Story investigation revealed he had failed to do so.

Tom Barrett, a former Michigan state senator and representative who is running for the House seat in Michigan’s 7th District, filed his candidate financial disclosure report on Nov. 2, a day after Raw Story reported he was nearly three months late in filing his disclosure.

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Financial backers of Biden's primary challenger ask him to return their donations

Minnesota Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips is lacking support for his primary bid against President Joe Biden from power brokers in his state who have donated to him in the past, CNBC reported.

Phillips has reportedly been asked by some of his former financial backers to return their donations.

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'Frivolous': Jack Smith fires back at Trump's 'meritless' motion to dismiss election case

Special counsel Jack Smith fired back at former President Donald Trump's motion to have his 2020 election subversion case dismissed.

Trump's legal team has argued that the former president cannot be charged with four counts of attempting to overturn the 2020 presidential election because he has free speech rights and was acquitted during a Senate impeachment trial.

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'For the safety of my staff': New York judge leaves gag order on Trump's attorneys

New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron ruled on Monday that he would not lift a limited gag order placed on Donald Trump's attorneys.

After Trump personally testified in his $250 million fraud trial, his attorneys offered a motion to retract a gag order preventing them from referring to court staff. Trump's attorneys have claimed that a biased court clerk was influencing the judge.

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'I can’t elect a criminal': A Trump conviction could cripple his re-election

While new polls over the weekend show President Joe Biden struggling against presumptive Republican Party 2024 presidential nominee Donald Trump, a deeper dive into the numbers demonstrates the former president's odds of winning would take a huge hit if he is convicted in one of his multitude of criminal trials.

According to reporting from the New York Times, for voters who are wavering between the two leading candidates a Trump criminal conviction would have a major impact on their vote.

What should be concerning for Trump, besides the prospect of ending up in jail, is that voters in key states who responded to those polls would drop him like a hot rock after a conviction.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

The Times is reporting Trump, "... remains weaker than at least one of his Republican rivals, and if he’s convicted and sentenced in any of his cases, some voters appear ready to turn on him — to the point where he could lose the 2024 election."

At issue are potential voter flips in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, where polling shows about 6 percent of Trump's support would wither away if takes a loss in criminal court.

The sea change would cost him the election, with one Republican voter, Kurt Wallach, 62 of Maricopa County telling the Times, "If he got convicted, I’d say great, put him out of the race, let’s get another Republican. If he’s not been convicted then I’d probably vote for Trump.”

Dakota Jordan, 26, also of Maricopa County agreed, explaining, "If he was convicted, there’s absolutely no way — I can’t elect a criminal as my leader."

The Times report also notes, "Mr. Trump remains broadly unpopular."

"A majority of swing state voters view him negatively. And the Times/Siena polls show that another Republican candidate, the former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley, would outperform Mr. Trump against Mr. Biden by 3 percentage points in these six states," the report states. "In a matchup that pits Mr. Biden against a generic Republican candidate, the Republican candidate wins by 16 percentage points."

You can read more here.

'He is NOT a fat pig!' Trump mocks Christie and bashes DeSantis in 80-minute rant

Former President Donald Trump, the frontrunner in the GOP presidential race, closed out a daylong event at the Republican Party’s Florida Freedom Summit in Kissimmee on Saturday with an 80-minute address filled with mockery — bashing GOP challengers Gov. Ron DeSantis, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, plus President Joe Biden.

Trump also joked about himself — he faces 91 counts on four separate criminal cases, only boosting his poll numbers.

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Trump rages against Iowa Gov. Reynolds for ‘disloyalty’ as she plans to endorse DeSantis

Former President Donald Trump made a flurry of social media posts criticizing Gov. Kim Reynolds Sunday as the Iowa Republican is expected on Monday to endorse Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.

The endorsement is an important win for DeSantis, who was 27 percentage points behind former President Donald Trump in the most recent Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom Iowa Poll. He’s also tied at 16% with former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley.

Reynolds, popular with Iowa Republicans, may be an influential factor in the 2024 Iowa caucuses as DeSantis hopes to solidify his position as the most viable Trump alternative in the GOP presidential nomination process. The Des Moines Register first reported that Reynolds plans to endorse DeSantis.

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Biden trails Trump in states likely to decide 2024 US election, polls show

By Jarrett Renshaw (Reuters) - Democratic President Joe Biden trails Republican frontrunner Donald Trump in five of the six most important battleground states exactly a year before the U.S. election as Americans express doubts about Biden's age and dissatisfaction toward his handling of the economy, polls released on Sunday showed. The polls were conducted by the New York Times and Siena College. Trump, leading the field for his party's 2024 nomination as he seeks to regain the presidency, leads in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania, with Biden ahead in Wisconsin, the polls sh...

John Oliver calls Ron DeSantis 'pathetic' for his comeback against shoe lifts mockery

Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) continues to be dogged by the allegations that he wears lifts in his boots to appear taller in public. John Oliver added his voice to the matter on Sunday for his show "Last Week Tonight."

According to the host, the short-lived presidential candidate had the worst comeback he could possibly come up with.

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Expert warns 'furious' Trump may 'explode' during New York fraud trial testimony

Donald Trump may "explode" with anger during Monday's testimony in a $250 million fraud trial.

Former federal prosecutor Jennifer Rodgers explained to CNN that she expected to see "fireworks" at the hearing.

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'C'mon': Political scientist dumps on new poll over unusual Black voter support for Trump

Appearing on CNN on Sunday afternoon to discuss new polling that shows presumptive 2024 GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump beating President Joe Biden in a smattering of key states, noted political scientist Larry Sabato brushed the numbers off.

Then he singled out highly suspect numbers of Black voters who indicated a choice for four-time indicted Donald Trump.

Speaking with CNN host Fredricka Whitfield, the founder and director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics, asserted no one should get shook up about the polling this far from the election, telling the CNN host, "Well, it's a low point for President Biden and, as I said, it's not unusual in the third year. But I'm sure they have specific plans to reach out to those groups. and often those groups don't engage in a major way until the end of a campaign or toward the end of a campaign, that's when they're contacted."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"So, again, it's early to panic," he continued before pointing out, "I will say this, though. The poll had, I believe, Black voters at 22 percent for Donald Trump. I'm not allowed to bet on elections, Fred, but I sure wish I was because I would love to bet multiple people that the black vote for Trump in the end will be somewhere between 8 and 13 percent max."

"Twenty-two percent? Come on," he scoffed as the CNN host laughed. "I mean, it really causes you to question how representative this poll is of what's going to happen. I believe that it tells you some of what's going to happen if the election were held today and the election isn't being held today — it's a year away."

Watch below or at the link

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