Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

2024 Elections

'It's getting real': Judge Chutkan sets Trump jury selection three months from now

Start the countdown, Special Counsel Jack Smith can begin selecting jurors in his criminal election fraud case against former President Donald Trump in just three months, according to court records.

Judge Tanya Sue Chutkan on Thursday set Feb. 9 as the date when hundreds of potential jurors in Washington D.C. will receive copies of a questionnaire to determine their eligibility to take part in the federal case against Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

'Catastrophic end': Conservative judge warns of dangers of a second Trump term

A second presidential term for Donald Trump would be both "regrettable" and "catastrophic" to American democracy.

That's according to retired judge J. Michael Luttig who spoke candidly with NBC' News' Jordan Rubin on the "Deadline: Legal Blog."

Keep reading... Show less

'He's disqualified': Minnesota Supreme Court hears arguments on Trump's ballot eligibility

Election attorney Ron Fein told the Minnesota Supreme Court on Thursday that former President Donald Trump should be considered "disqualified" from the presidential ballot until he receives amnesty from Congress for leading an insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021.

At a hearing before the court, Fein seemed to take the position that Trump could not be placed on the state's ballot because of his actions on Jan. 6. The 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution bars insurrectionists from running for office.

Keep reading... Show less

Majority of likely Iowa GOP caucusgoers disagree with Trump’s abortion comments

A majority of likely Republican caucusgoers say they disagree with frontrunner Donald Trump’s comments on abortion bans, the most recent Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom Iowa Poll found.

Nevertheless, the poll shows the former president continues to lead the field for the 2024 GOP caucuses, scheduled for Jan. 15.

A plurality of likely Republican caucusgoers said they were taking presidential candidates’ positions on abortion restrictions into account ahead of the 2024 Republican presidential nominating cycle, according to poll results published Wednesday. Abortion restrictions were “extremely important” for 41% of those surveyed, “important” for 38% and not that important for 20%, the poll found.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump lashes out at 'weak and ineffective' Republican Ken Buck in late night rant

In a late night post on Wednesday, Donald Trump attacked retiring Republican lawmaker Ken Buck, calling him weak and ineffective.

The former president was targeting Buck in response to reports that the right-wing congressman wouldn't run for re-election. Buck has previously said he would consider a job at some left-center news agency.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump asks Judge Chutkan to pause 'all proceedings' in D.C. elections case

Donald Trump on Wednesday evening asked Judge Chutkan to stay "all proceedings" in a case alleging he attempted to subvert the 2020 election after losing to President Joe Biden.

Trump, who has argued in court that his is totally immune from the suit because he was president at the time, doubled down on the key defense just last week. Trump's legal team at the time was responding to special counsel Jack Smith's filing, which said that Trump is "not above the law."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump is courting DeSantis-supporting Florida lawmakers ahead of debate: report

Gov. Ron DeSantis' Florida fiefdom is being flipped to switch favor for former President Donald Trump, according to an NBC News report.

He may be the popular governor of Florida but Trump is planning steal all the political sunshine.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump faceplants again in effort to throw out trial that could remove him from ballot

Former President Donald Trump has lost yet another procedural bid to toss out the case in Colorado challenging his eligibility for the presidential ballot under the 14th Amendment, reported The New York Times on Wednesday.

"It came after a lawyer for Mr. Trump had made a motion for a 'directed verdict' — essentially a conclusion, even before the defense had called any witnesses, that no legally sufficient basis existed for the plaintiffs to prevail," reported Maggie Astor. "The Trump team argued that his words and actions leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol were definitively protected by the First Amendment." State Judge Sarah Wallace denied the motion, but stressed it was not a decision on the case's merits.

Keep reading... Show less

'Trump's insurrection': Legal expert predicts judge will scratch ex-president from ballot

Trump's second run for the White House and perhaps his political future could be toast if a litigation trial in Denver, Colorado, that began this week, doesn't go in his way.

The stark warning was delivered by former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner on his latest episode of "Justice Matters."

Keep reading... Show less

'Not inevitable': GOP strategist shows how another Republican could beat Trump

Trump's not a shoe-in.

Despite dominating the polls and remaining the sun at the center of the GOP galaxy (despite being no-shows at every debate so far in the campaign), the 45th president still has work to do to knock out contenders vying for his party's nomination and ultimately the Oval Office.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump flips out over ballot cases: 'They are trying to illegally remove my name'

Donald Trump on Tuesday posted a video in which he rails against recent efforts to have the former president blocked from state ballots for purportedly aiding an insurrection.

Earlier in the day, it was reported that Trump had sued the state of Michigan in connection with its operations for determining candidate eligibility. Similar cases seeking to determine if Trump should be blocked from ballots have popped up in Colorado and other jurisdictions.

Keep reading... Show less

'Absurd!' Legal scholar destroys Trump's claim he's exempt from Fourteenth Amendment

Former President Donald Trump is faced with lawsuits in multiple states trying to disqualify him from the ballot under the 14th Amendment's Insurrection Clause, which prohibits anyone who engaged in insurrection from serving in public office without a waiver from Congress. Trump's attorneys have argued that this prohibition doesn't apply to the office of president — but that's a ridiculous reading that doesn't make any sense, argued retired Harvard Law professor Laurence Tribe on MSNBC Tuesday.

"Does Section 3 apply to presidents, the meaning of engaged in insurrection as used in Section 3, and did Trump's actions meet the standard for Section 3?" asked anchor Joy Reid. "Your thoughts, sir."

Keep reading... Show less

‘I kick back’: Nikki Haley blows off attacks in GOP presidential race

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley says it is a mistake for U.S. Sen. Tim Scott to take shots at her during debates as the two battle for their home state’s favorite son or daughter status in the race for GOP presidential nomination. Haley has been critical of presidential candidates who have served in Congress, including Scott, whom she appointed to the U.S. Senate in late 2012 after he served one term in the U.S. House. She has pointed to the growing U.S. debt, which now tops $33 trillion, saying members of Congress have not done enough to slow down government spending.....