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2024 Elections

A new growing threat to democracy is coming to a state near you: report

States removed more than 19 million people—or about 8.5% of the registered U.S. electorate—from voter rolls between the 2020 and 2022 electoral cycles, often via flawed practices that prevent many eligible persons from exercising their right to vote, a report released Thursday revealed.

The report—Protecting Voter Registration: An Assessment of Voter Purge Policies in 10 States—from the liberal think tank Dēmos, examines how voters are removed from electoral rolls in Arizona, California, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin.

"An inclusive democracy requires free and fair ballot access. But too many states are limiting this fundamental right."

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Iowa Dem chair calls out RFK Jr.'s 'antisemitic' comments in state fair kickoff

Iowa Democratic Party Chair Rita Hart said 2024 Democratic challengers to President Joe Biden are welcome to campaign in Iowa, but said she was concerned about Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “antisemitic” comments.

Hart, joined by Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a fellow Democrat, spoke about the state fair and Iowa caucuses Thursday during the recording of “Iowa Press” on Iowa PBS. While much of the attention is focused on the Republican presidential candidates vying for the 2024 nomination, there are multiple candidates running against Biden in the upcoming presidential nominating cycle. Two of those candidates, Kennedy and Marianne Williamson, plan to speak at the Des Moines Register Political Soapbox Saturday afternoon.

Hart said Iowa has “a longstanding tradition of candidates coming to the Iowa State Fair,” but she was “concerned about the antisemitic comments that Robert F. Kennedy has recently said.”

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'Loser!' Donald Trump lashes out at Chris Christie over wall allegations

Donald Trump on Thursday lashed out at Chris Christie, who has recently been calling out the former president for not finishing the wall between Mexico and the U.S.

Trump took to Truth Social to attack Christie, who was once an ally and even served in Trump's prior administration. Earlier on Thursday, Trump used his site to attack Mike Pence and Special Counsel Jack Smith.

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Former Trump attorney Michael Cohen might run for Congress: report

Former Donald Trump lawyer Michael Cohen is considering running for Congress, Semafor reports.

The former president’s “fixer” would run as a Democrat challenging incumbent Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.), the House Judiciary Committee’s ranking member of in a primary.

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'It's always about him': Ex-GOP governor slams Trump over loyalty pledge

Former South Carolina Gov. and Rep. Mark Sanford (R) on Thursday slammed Donald Trump over his stated refusal to sign a “loyalty pledge,” but he acknowledged that the former president’s stance will likely resonate with his supporters.

Sanford during an appearance on CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” was responding to Trump’s comments Wednesday night in which he said he wouldn’t sign a pledge to support the Republican candidate in 2024.

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'It gets complicated': Ex-Trump lawyer explains difficulties of 'clients like this'

It's extremely difficult and challenging for an attorney to defend a loose-cannon client like Donald Trump, said the former president's previous lawyer Tim Parlatore on CNN Thursday evening.

This comes amid signs that John Lauro, the new lawyer brought in to defend Trump in the 2020 election case, already has differences with his new client on legal strategy.

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'Gonna end this family grift': Christie hits Trump over Kushner-Saudi relationship

Former New Jersey governor and 2024 Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie railed against thrice-indicted ex-President Donald Trump for employing members of his family at the White House and suggested that there was a corrupt motive for Trump having then-Oval Office strategist Jared Kushner represent the United States government to other countries.

"Why would you send Jared Kushner to the Middle East when you have Rex Tillerson and Mike Pompeo as secretary of state? Two incredibly accomplished men. You send him why? We found out the answer six months after he left office. $2 billion from the Saudis to Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump. $2 billion," Christie told an audience of his GOP primary supporters. "And because he did all this and more, he's normalizing this conduct and now we have another president who's doing exactly the same thing and allowing Hunter Biden to run roughshod making money from foreign governments and selling access to Joe Biden."

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DeSantis’ megadonors watch and wait as campaign struggles

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — GOP megadonors who invested in Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as an alternative to Donald Trump for president are having serious second thoughts about continuing to back a candidate who political analysts say is looking like a bad bet. Among them are: A Las Vegas aerospace business and hotel owner who has spent part of his fortune looking for proof of extraterrestrials. An NFL team owner and mall developer whose bribery conviction was pardoned by Trump. An investment broker whose firm suffered fallout from the Silicon Valley Bank failure. Those donors and others, including hedge...

'Abundant evidence' shows Trump engaged in insurrection and cannot hold office: conservative scholars

Two conservative constitutional law professors have concluded that Donald Trump cannot be president again unless two-thirds of Congress votes to give him amnesty for leading an insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021.

The New York Times published the results from the University of Chicago's William Baude and the University of St. Thomas' Michael Stokes Paulsen.

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Infighting Nevada Republicans divide on Trump as Dems hope to capitalize on GOP minefield

As the field for Nevada’s GOP Senate primary grows, candidates are again being forced to reckon with Donald Trump as a campaign issue, with some candidates leaning into their support of the thrice indicted former president and others attempting to keep their distance without angering their party’s primary voters.

Across the aisle, Democratic groups are hoping to capitalize on the Republican infighting. But the vulnerable candidates — including incumbent Sen. Jacky Rosen — appear to be similarly concerned about potential fallout if they vocally criticize Trump and thus far are opting to stay silent on the former president’s third indictment.

The contrasts highlight the terse political minefield candidates on both sides of the aisle are walking in preparation for next year’s general election.

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Ex-White House reporter suggests Trump is acting 'crazy' because his 'survival instincts are failing'

According to a former White House correspondent who spent the Donald Trump years trying to get straight answers out of the ex-president's press secretaries, there is a marked difference between the man he covered in the Oval Office and the man who is posting threats against judges and prosecutors.

In a column for Salon, journalist Brian Karem suggested that Trump might be trying to appear irrational as a possible last-gasp defense if a guilty verdict looms in one of his multiple trials.

As Karem points out, the combative Trump he covered before he lost in 2020 to Joe Biden, "was often loud, obnoxious and abusive, but often accompanied his diatribes with "a wink." But, he went on, "Now he's like an unhinged and crazy mob boss."

"Perhaps he's setting himself up to plead diminished mental capacity after a slew of recent posts on his favorite social media platform that sound like a horrible cry for help," he suggested before later adding, "Donald Trump's world, in other words, is crumbling."

"Trump is either genuinely crazy or he's acting like it to try to avoid prison. His supporters are incapable of adapting to that reality," he elaborated. "We have very real concerns, including some of the toughest existential threats humanity has ever faced. Climate change, potential nuclear war, famine and global militarization threaten our survival, but we're stuck talking about this one crazy SOB – apparently we can't solve the other problems until we fix this one."

He added, "Perhaps the best thing we could all do is forget all about Donald Trump — after he's long gone. The best he can do is to plead insanity."

"But don't count on it. Donald Trump does not care about humanity. He only cares about himself — and now his survival instincts are failing."

You can read his entire piece here.

Trump is delivering a 'death blow to the old way' as he tramples rivals in Iowa: report

Donald Trump's massive lead in Iowa, with its first-in-the-nation caucus, is changing the political landscape nationally as the Republican Party primary season kicks into gear.

According to a report from the New York Times, the former president is barely appearing in the state where potential nominees have traditionally spent a disproportionate amount of time in meet and greets and attending state fairs in order to attract voters.

However, this year Trump has thrown out the playbook because he has such an overwhelming lead in the polls, which led the Times to report that he is "delivering what could be a death blow to the old way."

According to the report, it may be now or never for Trump's rivals for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination.

IN OTHER NEWS: Trump's 'most deranged' supporters are serious threats to commit acts of terrorism: former FBI official

As GOP strategist Doug Gross put it, "You’ve got to do it in Iowa, otherwise it’s gone, it’s all national media. The chance to show that he’s vulnerable is gone. You’ve got to do it here, and you’ve got to do it now.”

"What’s different about Iowa this time, according to interviews with more than a dozen state legislators, political operatives and veterans of past caucuses, is that before Republicans consider a broad field of candidates, they are asking themselves a more basic, binary question: Trump or not Trump?" the report states before adding, "Where in the past Iowans might have told those running for president that they were on a list of three or four top contenders, Mr. Trump’s dominance over Republican politics has left candidates fighting for a far smaller slice of voters."

You can read more here.

Judges may 'have no choice' but to jail Trump if he keeps up attacks: legal expert

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," contributor Ken Dilanian stated that legal experts whom he has spoken with are growing increasingly concerned about Donald Trump's attacks on judges and prosecutors who are pursuing cases against him and they may be forced to have him taken into custody and jailed to get his attention.

Speaking with hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brezinski, the legal affairs expert said the former president's heightened rhetoric over being indicted is putting judges in an awkward position.

As part of a discussion on Trump "witness tampering," Dilanian stated he has been speaking with legal experts about the unprecedented territory of prosecuting a former president.

"It's a really horrible dilemma that all these judges are in because Donald Trump is running for president, and political speech is the most protected speech under the First Amendment," he began. "Yet, normally, a criminal defendant would not be allowed to get away with trying to influence the jury pool by impugning the prosecutors."

IN OTHER NEWS: Clarence Thomas’ 38 vacations: The other billionaires who have treated the Supreme Court justice to luxury travel

"But a lot of experts I talked to, even ones very critical of Trump, think that these judges are going to have no choice but to let him do almost everything, except threaten like he did the other day with, you know, 'If you come after me, I'm coming after you,'" he continued. "That's what they think would cross the line, threats against judges or prosecutors."

"Then there is a horrible situation of what do the judges leverage?" he continued. "They can fine him, but the ultimate leverage is they can throw him in jail. Now, we're into this situation where a person with lifetime Secret Service protection, can they be jailed? How will the Secret Service react? How will the marshals react. We say this all the time, but we are in really dangerous, uncharted territory with these legal cases against the former president."

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