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2024 Elections

Revealed: Top GOP donors are making 'secret overtures' to dump Trump

Unhappy at the prospect that Donald Trump is about to walk away with the Republican Party's 2024 presidential nominations that could doom the GOP's chances of retaking the White House, top conservative donors are making "secret overtures" to Republicans who have not joined the primary race in the hopes of dumping the former president.

According to a report from Axios, big money donors are sitting on their wallets while the search for a Trump alternative proceeds with Governors Brian Kemp (GA) and Glenn Youngkin (VA) high on the list.

As Axios is reporting, the fact that, new alternatives are being sought is bad news for Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) who was once believed to be the top contender only to see his star fall once he hit the campaign trail.

According to the report, finding someone else to take on Trump -- who is being swamped with criminal indictment -- is a '"long-shot" but not unattainable if the money to back a candidacy is there.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"Youngkin, if he announces, wants to wait until after what he hopes will be big GOP wins in November's legislative races in Virginia," Axios is reporting, adding, "Billionaire Ronald Lauder is among the GOP donors who are considering backing Youngkin if the governor gets into the race, a source who has spoken with Lauder told Axios. A spokesperson for Lauder declined to comment."

Billionaire Thomas Peterffy is also pushing for Youngkin after being in the DeSantis camp previously.

Noting that Kemp is unlikely to make the leap, the report adds that he is being courted just the same.

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The Georgia indictments are the most likely to bring lasting change for local elections

A lot of ink has been spilled this week pointing out the differences and similarities between the two sets of indictments that former President Donald Trump faces for his efforts to subvert the 2020 election.

Special counsel Jack Smith’s federal case is highly narrative. He is creatively interpreting older law to apply to completely unprecedented behavior from a public official in the United States, requiring storytelling and chronological framing to explain the applicability of the laws. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’s charges in Georgia — though vast in number and diverse in scope — have far less of that and don’t really require it. The crimes described by Willis, or at least most of them, are simply more straightforward than the crimes described by Smith.

And part of the reason for that relative simplicity is that elections are local and governed by local law. The offices that carry out elections are county and state offices, and the officials who can most meaningfully be influenced to violate their legally required duties are county and state officials. There are more applicable crimes in this space because there are more applicable laws in this space.

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Prominent Republican warns Trump rivals of the 'humiliation' that awaits them in blistering op-ed

Just days before the Republican Party holds it's first 2024 Presidential debate, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R) took the pages of the New York Times to urge contenders for the party's nomination who stand no chance of winning to drop out and back one candidate who stands a chance of defeating Donald Trump as the party's nominee.

Along the way, he also advised those who are sticking around in hopes of being Trump's running mate or want a cabinet job to rethink their plans.

Asserting as he has in many interviews that there is no chance the former president who has now been indicted in four different jurisdictions can win in the general election, Sununu suggested there is only one path to stave off losing the White House again in 2024.

Writing, "If Mr. Trump is the Republican nominee for president in 2024, Republicans will lose up and down the ballot," he added, "Donald Trump is beatable, and it starts in Iowa and New Hampshire. Ignore the national polls that show he is leading — they are meaningless. It’s a reflection of the national conversation, name ID, and who is top of mind — not where the momentum is headed."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office.

Once again returning to the lesser candidates who barely make a ripple in the polls, he cautioned them for sticking around just so they can become part of his second administration should that come to pass.

"It must be said that candidates who stay in this race when they have no viable path should be called out. They are auditioning for a Trump presidency cabinet that will simply never happen," he wrote before cautioning, "And even if a Trump administration magically materialized, no public humiliation that great is worth the sacrifice."

You can read more here.

Morning Joe stunned by 'bizarre' poll showing 'slavish devotion' to Trump

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough reacted to a new poll that found Donald Trump supporters trusted the former president even more than their own friends and family members.

A new poll conducted by CBS News/YouGov found 71 percent of Trump voters believed the ex-president told the truth, compared to 63 percent for friends and family, 56 percent for conservative media figures and 42 percent for religious leaders, and the "Morning Joe" host said they sounded like cult members.

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Opportunity zones are one of Tim Scott’s signature initiatives, but how successful are they?

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Columbia’s Middleton family, leading developers in the downtown area in recent years, made a sizable profit when they sold their share in a local hospice business two years ago. Rather than pocket the income, the family invested those earnings in one of their biggest development ventures to date: a 65,000-square-foot production brewery and restaurant north of downtown. Downtown’s Main Street is packed with Middleton businesses, including a boutique bowling alley, a dueling piano bar and a hibachi restaurant. But the family chose to locate Peak Drift Brewery somewhere less flas...

There’s one 'normal' choice on 'pretty weird' list of GOP candidates in this Dem leader’s eyes

Minnesota Democratic Governor Tim Walz, during a Sunday interview with NBC's Meet the Press suggested that North Dakota Republican Governor Doug Burgum is the GOP's "most normal" 2024 presidential candidate, Politico reports.

"Doug's a pretty good guy, but he's trapped in a Republican Party with no ideas," Walz told host Chuck Todd. "I do believe that Doug is probably the most normal of these — that's a pretty weird group of folks going to be on the debate stage."

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'Be prepared': DC insider warns Trump’s reelection bid is 'phase four of his attempted coup'

Former President Donald Trump's 2024 reelection bid is "phase four of his attempted coup," ex-United States Labor Secretary Robert Reich writes in an opinion column for The Guardian on Sunday.

The first three stages of Trump's failed efforts to subvert American democracy were, Reich writes respectively, "his refusal to concede the loss of the 2020 election," his "plot to overturn the result" of the contest that President Joe Biden won, and his ongoing campaign to "discredit and undermine the criminal justice system that is seeking to hold him accountable for phase two."

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'Cult': Democrat blasts GOP voters after poll shows Trump viewed as 'source of true information'

United States Representative Jim Himes (D-Connecticut) on Sunday blasted supporters of former President Donald Trump following the publication of a CBS/YouGov poll, which found that nearly two-thirds of likely Republican primary voters are backing Trump for the GOP nomination despite the ninety-one criminal charges that have been filed against him.

"Trump voters' affinity for him seems to insulate the former president from attacks whether or not the debates this week, because voters basically say they aren't receptive to such criticism," CBS correspondents Anthony Salvanto, Kabir Khanna, Jennifer de Pinto, and Fred Backus explain. "Instead, a whopping nine in 10 GOP primary voters want the other candidates to focus on making the case for themselves, but not against Trump."

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'He's starting to seem like he's above it all': Former Trump aide on abandoning the debates

While former communications director Stephanie Grisham agreed her former boss wouldn't look presidential at this week's Republican primary debate, she warned he has to be careful as he moves forward that he doesn't appear holier than the other candidates.

Speaking to CNN's Jim Acosta, with former Homeland Security Adviser to Mike Pence, Olivia Troye, Grisham explained that Trump's poll numbers might have him winning, but he shouldn't take it all for granted.

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Rudy Giuliani claims new 'scientific evidence' will prove his innocence

Rudy Giuliani claimed on Sunday to have new "scientific evidence" to prove widespread election fraud and that he is innocent after being charged in Georgia.

On his Sunday WABC program, Giuliani responded to a caller who wanted to know how he could prove he was not part of a criminal conspiracy to interfere in Georgia's presidential election.

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'Seems like a coverup': Mark Meadows may face more legal trouble after censoring Trump book

MSNBC legal analyst Neal Katyal suspects a coverup after former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows deleted damning information about Donald Trump from his book.

According to ABC News, Meadows confirmed he had no knowledge of Trump's alleged order to declassify a trove of documents before leaving office. ABC News also reviewed an early copy of Meadows' book, written before he deleted passages that reflected poorly on Trump.

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GOP officials fear Biden will pull a Trump stunt on Trump -- and it will be his fault

Donald Trump's plan to skip the Republican Party presidential debate this week is causing no small amount of angst among GOP officials and not just because he will reportedly hold a competing appearance with fired Fox News personality Tucker Carlson.

Earlier this past week reports surfaced that the former president would make good on his promise to boycott the debate being televised on Fox because of his distaste for the conservative network that he feels has not been supportive enough as well as not wanting to hand his rivals a chance to share the stage with him.

According to a report from The New York Times, the former president has been advised by RNC officials that he may open the door for President Joe Biden to use the same tactics on him.

The Times is reporting that RNC head Ronna McDaniel made a July trip to meet with Trump and implore him to participate while warning it could backfire after he wins the GOP nominations and becomes the GOP's 2024 presidential candidate.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office.

"One of the arguments that the Republican National Committee chairwoman, Ronna McDaniel, made to Mr. Trump that day was that by skipping the debate, he would give President Biden an excuse to get out of debating Mr. Trump should they meet again in 2024, according to two people familiar with their conversation," the report states. "The strong desire of Mr. Trump and his advisers to see him debate Mr. Biden may lead to Mr. Trump undercutting work by the R.N.C., which has spent the last two years searching for an alternative to the Commission on Presidential Debates for hosting general election matchups."

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GOP candidates are right to ignore the RNC’s 'farcical' loyalty pledge: columnist

A handful of GOP presidential primary candidates, including the field's frontrunner, former President Donald Trump, have refused to sign the Republican National Committee's "loyalty pledge" to support whoever the party's nominee is in 2024 and to not run as an independent. On Sunday, The Daily Beast's Andy Craig explains in an opinion column why the RNC's demand is "bad on the merits, politically counter-productive, arguably illegal, and candidates and the networks should stop enabling it."

After noting that "until recently, the national party committees had no part in primary debates" and that "debates were organized by media outlets," Craig writes. "Both parties adopted their own schedule of permitted debates, assigning which channels would host them, and set their own rules for how candidates could qualify."

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