Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

2024 Elections

'Trump has become more detached from reality': ABC host raises alarm as election nears

During the ABC "This Week" roundtable panel discussion on poll numbers matching up President Joe Biden against presumptive GOP 2024 presidential nominee Donald Trump, host Jonathan Karl complained that there has not been near enough attention paid to the mental decline of Trump.

Addressing comments made by host George Stephanopolous who brought up the polls, Karl stated, "We have seen similar polls like this that which show that in a hypothetical match-up which doesn't seem all that hypothetical anymore in Biden versus Trump. It shows that he [Trump] can actually win and he's leading in these battleground states."

"But, George," he continued, "I have to tell you one thing to consider here is: Trump has been in the news over the last year or so based on these criminal cases — the civil case in New York — but people have not been paying attention to what Trump has become."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"Trump, since he left the White House, and this is really the theme of my book, has become more detached from reality than he ever was even in the White House," he claimed.

To make his case, he continued, "If you think of where we were in January of 2021, that's the starting point for where a Trump presidency would be next time around. So I think he's had largely, believe it or not, a free ride. Again, the criminal cases we know about, but what he's thinking, what he's doing, he had a speech just the other day in Texas where he referred to the people that are in prison because they attacked the U.S. Capitol and beat up police officers, he called them not prisoners but hostages."

"Trump has become also increasingly confused about things. He sometimes he thinks that he lost to [Barack] Obama in the last election," he offered. "He confuses basic facts and says some rather strange things, but there isn't much attention paid. As we get closer to these primaries, we'll see where not just Trump is based on these criminal cases, but where he is now as a human being."

Watch below or at the link:

Keep reading... Show less

Trump allies proposing deploying military to the streets if he wins in 2024: report

With an eye on a possible win in the 2024 presidential election, allies of former Donald Trump are pitching plans to quell public unrest over his return to the Oval Office by using the military to put down potential protests the moment he takes power.

According to a report from the Washington Post, Trump insiders are floating the possibility of invoking the Insurrection Act immediately after being sworn in.

Keep reading... Show less

'I talked about it when I left': Trump spoke about terror screening after tenure

Former President Donald Trump at a speech on Saturday said that he spoke about terrorism targets and screening processes after he left office.

Trump, whose central theme of the speech appeared to be that nothing bad happened during the four years he served as president, started talking about terrorism after insulting Joe Biden's intelligence. Trump is currently facing criminal charges for allegedly mishandling secrets of the U.S.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's plan to rig a swing state election in his favor could backfire on GOP: report

Donald Trump's people have been quietly rigging a swing state's primary for his benefit, and it could backfire, according to a report.

Trump has railed against those who he believes "rigged" an election against him back in 2020.

Keep reading... Show less

DeSantis makes his case before Trump-dominated GOP summit in Florida

KISSIMMEE, Fla. — Gov. Ron DeSantis listed a string of conservative policy wins in Florida and stressed his leadership abilities as reasons why he should be president but never mentioned his rival Donald Trump at the Florida Republican Party’s annual summit on Saturday. Beneath a logo proclaiming “Florida Is DeSantis Country,” the governor said there would be “a lot that happens in this country over the next weeks and months. But I’ll tell you this, I will get the job done as your nominee. … As a leader, I will always conduct myself in a way that you’re proud of. And as your president, I promi...

'He’s burned a lot of bridges': Ex-DeSantis staffers pounce on his presidential bid flop

With the challenge by Ron DeSantis to take the place of Donald Trump as the presumptive 2024 GOP presidential nominee headed to an ignominious end, former allies of the Florida governor claim he has a lot of work to do to get back in the good graces of key Republicans in his state.

According to a report from CNN, DeSantis' efforts to out-Trump Trump has left a sour taste with many in the state with one insider admitting, "He's burned a lot of bridges."

Of note has been Trump's ability to outmaneuver DeSantis while he has been serving as governor while at the same time swiping former key advisers to help with his own campaign.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

As CNN's Steve Contorno and Kristen Holmes, wrote, "In the tug of war for home-state supremacy, Trump has gained the upper hand in part by exploiting rifts between DeSantis and Florida Republicans. The strategy has played out easier than the former president’s team anticipated, as DeSantis has left a wake of ill will in the state on the path to political stardom."

According to the report some former DeSantis aides and supporters "harbor deep-seated and personal animosity" toward the governor, with the report also adding, "His attempts to reassert himself as the state’s dominant political force have repeatedly run into enemies he has accumulated over the past decade."

Keep reading... Show less

Chaos and subversion: How a free and fair 2024 presidential election could be under threat

The last time America elected a president, it led to a deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol and a failed coup that gravely damaged the political system and marred the peaceful transfer of power for the first time in U.S. history.

A year from now, the nation’s voters will decide another presidential contest — likely one that pits the same two candidates against each other.

Despite a slew of arrests and felony convictions stemming from the events of Jan. 6, 2021, there’s little sign that those who attacked democracy last time have significantly moderated their outlook.

Keep reading... Show less

'Imminent danger to America': Conservative judge says Constitution must disqualify Trump

Conservative former federal Judge Michael Luttig warned on Friday's edition of MSNBC's "Deadline: White House" that former President Donald Trump is an ongoing threat to the constitutional order, and reiterated that he must be barred from returning to office.

This comes after longtime Trump adviser Steve Bannon was revealed in a new book to openly profess Trump's choice to hold a campaign rally in Waco, Texas was a direct dog whistle to embolden far-right antigovernment extremists.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump-connected influencers are feuding online over their behavior at Mar-a-Lago

Influencer etiquette at Mar-A-Lago — the place Special Counsel Jack Smith contends Donald Trump stored top secret documents in violation of national security laws — sparked a virtual fist-throwing fight on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Friday.

“We memed ... your goofy a-- for MONTHS and when you saw me in person REPEATEDLY at Mar-a-lago, you didn't say S---,” wrote MAGA life coach Brenden Dilley of his interaction with Republican influencer Rob Smith at the Trump estate where FBI agents say they uncovered 11,000 official documents, 17 of them marked top secret.

Keep reading... Show less

'Totally embarrassed': Voters hope new maps will draw them out of MTG's Georgia district

A swath of voters in U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Georgia district have keen hopes that a recent anti-gerrymandering ruling will release them from her district, according to a new report.

Black voters in southwest Cobb County — lumped into Greene’s 14th Congressional District by state Republicans in 2021 — hope to win next year a representative who shares their views and values their constituency, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump pitches 2024 election as most important for nation’s future during Houston campaign

HOUSTON — Former President Donald Trump said at a campaign rally Thursday that Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton did not deserve to get impeached, a brief aside during remarks in which he pitched the upcoming presidential election as the most important for the future of a nation “ready to fail.”

“On day one of our new administration, we will end Biden’s nation-wrecking war on American energy,” Trump said to applause. “With the help of Texas oil and gas workers, we will restore American energy.”

Trump’s event took place at Trendsetter Engineering in northwest Houston and drew more than 100 people. The company designs equipment for offshore oil drilling.

Keep reading... Show less

Where are California's top U.S. Senate candidates raising their cash?

This story was originally published by CalMatters, nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.

In northwest Los Angeles, a 15-square-mile enclave sits at the foot of the Santa Monica Mountains. Tucked between Bel Air and the ridges, the neighborhood is where nature, art and wealth concentrate: It boasts both the Getty Museum and the Skirball Cultural Center.

It is also home to the most generous donors in California’s 2024 U.S. Senate race.

Keep reading... Show less

'Trump's a few fries short of a happy meal': GOP governor goes after ex-president on CNN

He's fighting for votes and also his wits.

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu slammed Donald Trump during an appearance on CNN with Abby Phillip, calling out the GOP frontrunner in the 2024 race for the White House as someone so desperate to win the vote that he's borderline certifiable.

Keep reading... Show less