Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

2024 Elections

Judge scolds fuming Trump lawyer after he accuses Jack Smith of violating his oath

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan on Monday scolded John Lauro, an attorney for Donald Trump, after he accused special counsel Jack Smith of violating his oath of office.

Journalist Brandi Buchman reported from the hearing called to set a trial date for Trump's federal election interference case.

Keep reading... Show less

Federal judge brings hammer down: Trump will have to make trial date 'regardless of his schedule'

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan on Monday said that Donald Trump will not be given special privileges because he is running for president while facing multiple trials.

At a hearing on Monday, Chutkan said trial dates proposed by Trump and special counsel Jack Smith are not appropriate. Smith offered a trial early in 2024, while Trump wants a date in April 2026.

Keep reading... Show less

A jury conviction of Trump 'could be fatal' for the GOP: former Trump adviser

Appearing on CNN on Monday morning a former high-ranking advisor to Donald Trump claimed the Republican party is playing with fire if they allow Donald Trump to be their 2024 presidential candidate.

Speaking with host Boris Sanchez, former national security adviser John Bolton -- who had a major falling out with the former president -- suggested the GOP could be fatally wounded if the top of the 2024 ticket is a convicted felon.

"Do you believe there's still a lane for another Republican to take the primary?" host Sanchez prompted.

"Yes, I do, and I think it's difficult but I think this could all turn, both for the primary, but particularly for the general election, on whether any of the four pending criminal indictments actually come to trial and get a jury verdict before the election," Bolton replied.

"Because I think if a jury convicts Trump, I think that could be fatal either to getting the nomination or certainly in November," he added. "All of the other legal proceedings have either had no effect or, as you point out in this fundraising news, have benefited Trump. But I think a jury verdict of guilty is something very different."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

'I think even a lot of MAGA Trumpers really don't want to elect a convicted felon president," he elaborated. "The difficulty for Republicans is that the convention is in August, but many of the primaries and caucuses begin quite early next year. So the argument has to be made to Republican voters, don't vote for somebody who may be a felon by the time we get to our convention."

Keep reading... Show less

Expect 'multiple cases' of Trump allies flipping on him: Former White House official

With two major court hearings scheduled on Monday in Washington, D.C. and Florida, both related to Donald Trump, one former White House official who served under Trump claimed she expects to see former aides swept up in his four indictments to turn on him.

Appearing on CNN early Monday morning, former Deputy White House press secretary Sarah Matthews told the panel the Mar-a-Lago employee who recently changed their testimony after swapping out attorneys is a preview of things to come.

CNN host Sara Sidner prompted Matthews by asking her if "as these cases get closer and closer and closer, do you think that the people around him will start to break down and say, 'I don't want to get popped for this? I'm going to cooperate?'"

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office.

"I think that we're going to see it in multiple cases," Matthews replied. "Obviously the one you reference, the documents case, we suspect, I think, there is a name out there of someone who they think it is that flipped and I think that's the right call because at the end of the day."

"Donald Trump demands loyalty from everybody but gives loyalty to no one and he would be so quick to throw any of these people under the bus so I think this is crucial," she continued. "We saw this happen with the January 6th congressional committee with Cassidy Hutchinson. She at first had a Trump-appointed attorney who was funding her legal fees and they wanted her to not recall events she very much did recall. And then she was compelled to do the right thing, switch lawyers, and hire someone who was acting in her best interest and not Donald Trump's best interests."

Watch the video below or at this link.

Keep reading... Show less

Revealed: Prosecutor fired by DeSantis was on the verge of cracking down on crooked cops

A Florida prosecutor who was one of two fired by Gov. Ron DeSantis as part of his war on "wokeness" is questioning the timing of her dismissal while revealing that she was poised to bring charges against a bevy of crooked cops.

In an interview with the Daily Beast's Jose Pagliery, Orlando-based State Attorney Monique Worrell suggested that DeSantis -- who is running a faltering campaign to be the 2024 Republican Party's presidential nominee -- may have been giving a local sheriff an assist by removing her from her post.

Keep reading... Show less

'Blood on his hands': Sobbing Florida lawmaker blames DeSantis' 'woke war' for Jacksonville shooting

Florida state Rep. Angie Nixon (D) attributes attacks on people of color in her state to Gov. Ron DeSantis' war against "woke."

For months, DeSantis campaigned for president by touting his record banning the teaching about slavery, discussing the Civil Rights movement, and other history involving Black Americans. He bragged that Florida was where "woke" came to die.

Keep reading... Show less

Analysis: Trump trials present unique challenge, opportunity for Biden campaign

A barrage of state and federal criminal charges leveled against your main political rival should be good news for any democratic leader facing reelection, but Donald Trump's legal woes present U.S. President Joe Biden with a unique challenge in the months ahead, political strategists say.

Biden has so far remained mum as his Republican predecessor was charged with 91 felony counts in four indictments this year related to paying hush money to a porn star, unlawfully keeping classified documents and attempting to overturn the 2020 election.

'If you can get one nowadays': Rudy Giuliani bellyaches about not being able to find a lawyer

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani griped about the availability of lawyers after he reportedly struggled to find one to represent him in Georgia.

During his Sunday radio program on WABC, Giuliani's co-host Maria Ryan asked Rep. Mike Collins (R-GA) if it was legal for Fulton County to release mugshots of Giuliani, former president Donald Trump, and 17 others.

Keep reading... Show less

'There's no evidence': Fox News host wrecks guest over Hunter Biden cocaine claim

Fox News host Howard Kurtz corrected Outkick host Charly Arnolt after she claimed President Joe Biden's son Hunter consumed cocaine at the White House.

During a Sunday discussion on Fox News, Kurtz asked Arnolt about the possibility that Biden might testify if his son is charged with tax crimes.

Keep reading... Show less

Mike Pence floats 'expedited' death penalty for Jacksonville gunman who killed himself

Republican presidential candidate Mike Pence suggested the solution to mass shootings in America was to kill guilty people quicker — even though many gunmen end up dead at the scene.

CBS host Nancy Cordes asked Pence about a recent racially motivated shooting in Jacksonville, Florida.

Keep reading... Show less

Kevin McCarthy: Biden impeachment inquiry is a 'natural step forward'

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) on Sunday said that an impeachment inquiry of President Joe Biden was a "natural step forward."

During an interview on Fox News, host Maria Bartiromo urged McCarthy to pursue an impeachment inquiry.

Keep reading... Show less

Combative Ramaswamy snaps at CNN's Bash after she calls him out for KKK smear of Black lawmaker

During a chaotic interview on CNN's "State of the Union," Republican presidential nomination contender Vivek Ramaswamy accused host Dana Bash of not being "intellectually honest" as she grilled him for equating Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) — who is Black — with "the modern grand wizards of the modern KKK."

Asking if he wanted to walk back his inflammatory comments, he refused and what ensued was a back and forth where he refused to stop talking as she attempted to follow up on what he was saying.

At one point, she asked, '"That is a debate that is based on nonviolent discussion which you just said, she's using rhetoric. There is — that's one thing, and another thing is to say that she represents and she is a modern version of a KKK, which as you know, was dedicated to the subjugation and violence against black people."

"How on earth is she a modern Grand Wizard of that kind of an organization?" she pressed.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"Dana, let's be honest — let's be intellectually honest and get to the heart of what this debate ought to be about," he fired back. "There is a world view that says that the remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination; that if you're black or brown, you have to have a particular point of view. That's from Ayanna Pressley and Ibram X. Kendi, the people I quoted in my speech."

"But regardless when you accuse her of being a Grand Wizard of KKK? Can you have that intellectually honest discussion with that kind of rhetoric?" Bash managed to get in.

Keep reading... Show less

Alina Habba: Trump doesn't need trial prep because he's 'incredibly intelligent'

Alina Habba, an attorney for former President Donald Trump, said her client does not need to be prepped for trial because he is "incredibly intelligent," unlike the "average person."

On Sunday, Habba was asked about Trump's overlapping trials by Fox News host Shannon Bream.

Keep reading... Show less