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2024 Elections

There’s no evidence of where Tim Scott’s 2024 campaign money is going: report

Although United States Senator Tim Scott's 2024 campaign for president has raked in millions of dollars this year, it's a "mystery" as to where the money is going, The New York Times reports.

Per The Times, recent Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings show filings "the Scott campaign made $4.3 million in payments from April 1 to June 30 to a company called Meeting Street Services L.L.C.," which "included $2.8 million for 'placed media' and more for digital fund-raising, strategy and video production."

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Kamala Harris asks Iowans to be vigilant in the face of a ‘full-on attack’ on freedom

Vice President Kamala Harris stopped in Des Moines on Friday to call on Iowans to fight back against what she called a “full-on attack against hard-won freedoms.”

During an hour-long stop at Des Moines’ Drake University, Harris focused on the Iowa Legislature’s recent passage of a law – stayed, for now, by the courts – that seeks to ban access to virtually all abortions after the sixth week of pregnancy.

She contrasted that legislation with polls showing that a majority of Iowans support a woman’s right to an abortion.

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'Running to stay out of prison': Iowa Republicans cheer Trump and boo Will Hurd for dig at criminal charges

Iowa Republicans emphasized they were open to hearing from all 13 presidential candidates Friday at the state party’s Lincoln Dinner, but many in the audience were ready to send former President Donald Trump back for a rematch.

“In Iowa, we are a neutral, objective state,” Republican Party of Iowa Chairman Jeff Kaufmann said. “We’re going to give everybody a fair chance.”

The rules were the same for all 13 of the Republican 2024 presidential candidates: 10 minutes and the microphone was cut off. While all candidates had equal time, they did not meet an equally enthusiastic audience.

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Trump criticizes DeSantis without pushback at Iowa event, even after new criminal charges

By Tim Reid and Alexandra Ulmer (Reuters) - Republican presidential rivals Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis appeared at the same event in the 2024 White House race for the first time on Friday, but even a day after Trump faced fresh criminal charges, it was the former president talking down DeSantis rather than the other way around. Trump, who has all year relentlessly attacked DeSantis, his nearest rival for the Republican nomination, told a crowd of Iowa Republicans "not to take a chance" on the Florida governor he mockingly calls "DeSanctus", among other nicknames. DeSantis was seen as a major...

'A lot of ego and narcissism': GOP Governor explains why Trump is running again

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu on Friday shot down the suggestion that Donald Trump is running for president as way to avoid legal accountability, calling it a narcissistic endeavor.

Sununu during an appearance on CNN’s “The Source with Kaitlan Collins” said Trump’s candidacy was about nothing more than “a lot of ego and narcissism.”

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DeSantis’ campaign ‘reset’ sounds like familiar pitch at high-profile Iowa GOP dinner

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis stuck to familiar talking points during a speech to a prominent gathering of Iowa Republicans on Friday, even as his presidential campaign embarks on a widely touted reboot intended to reverse the governor’s flagging prospects in the race for the 2024 GOP nomination. Speaking at the Iowa GOP’s annual Lincoln Dinner in Des Moines, DeSantis painted a picture of a country in decline before turning to his record as Florida governor. He was quick to remind a generally friendly audience that he signed a six-week abortion ban in his home state, “protected Second Amendment ri...

RFK Jr. blasts President Biden administration for ignoring his Secret Service 'request': report

Conspiracy theorist and 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., took to social media to criticize President Joe Biden's administration for denying the candidate protection from the United States Secret Service, Politico reports.

The presidential hopeful tweeted Friday, "Since the assassination of my father in 1968, candidates for president are provided Secret Service protection. But not me. Typical turnaround time for pro forma protection requests from presidential candidates is 14-days. After 88-days of no response and after several follow-ups by our campaign, the Biden Administration just denied our request. Secretary Mayorkas: 'I have determined that Secret Service protection for Robert F Kennedy Jr is not warranted at this time.' Our campaign's request included a 67-page report from the world's leading protection firm, detailing unique and well established security and safety risks aside from commonplace death threats."

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Former President Trump to rally in Erie, Pa., as he faces another potential indictment

PHILADELPHIA — Former President Donald Trump is coming to Erie for a campaign rally Saturday, as speculation swirls that another federal indictment over his attempts to overturn the 2020 election in Pennsylvania and other states could be on the way, and as he faces new federal charges in a case alleging he mishandled classified documents. The former president will appear Saturday night at the Erie Insurance Arena. The rally comes two days after his lawyers met with the special counsel investigating his efforts to overturn the presidential election results and his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capi...

Fascism expert explains why 'cult leader' Trump cannot leave the race

Donald Trump has been slapped with a superseding indictment in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case, and is expecting to be indicted with another round of charges in the federal January 6 case. Between all of that, the Georgia elections case, and the Manhattan indictment for falsifying business records, the former president could be defending against four criminal cases during the election cycle, all of which carry prison time. But Trump vowed this week to stay in the race, no matter what his legal situation is.

That's not a surprise, argued Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a New York University history professor and the author of multiple books on fascism and autocrats, on MSNBC Friday.

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DeSantis backtracks on appointing RFK Jr. to lead public health agency

Just two days after saying that if elected president he’d consider appointing conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead a federal public health agency, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis walked those comments back on Friday.

The Republican presidential candidate on Wednesday told OutKick’s Clay Travis that Kennedy’s views on COVID protocols and vaccines would fit his vision in forming in a new administration, and suggested selecting Kennedy to lead the CDC or FDA after Travis asked him if he’d consider the longshot Democratic presidential candidate as a running mate.

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'What politician doesn't insult children?': Ex-GOP rep. roasts 'uniquely unlikable' DeSantis

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was once hailed as the GOP's best alternative to former President Donald Trump in 2024 — but so far it hasn't worked out that way, with DeSantis lagging the former president by 30 points and trying to fend off self-inflicted controversies like defending a state curriculum that teaches kids Black people learned valuable skills from slavery.

And even on top of that, DeSantis has had problems simply interacting with voters as he stumps in Iowa. He has come under mockery after an awkward conversation with a young girl at the state fair, where he asked her what she was eating and when she said ice cream or an "ICEE," he replied, "There's probably a lot of sugar, huh?"

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Black conservatives 'livid' after DeSantis attacks Tim Scott for opposing slavery curriculum

Just as his presidential campaign was “rebooting,” Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis decided to repeatedly attack two Black Republicans who had gently pushed back against his education curriculum on slavery.

Black conservatives are “livid.”

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Tiny South Carolina town officials at odds over eating $40K in costs after Trump visit

A Donald Trump rally in the tiny town of Pickens, South Carolina, on July 1 left the community with $40,000 in expenses which community leaders are debating absorbing, reports WSPA/Fox8.

The former president is headed to Erie, Pennsylvania, this Saturday still owing $35,000 for expenses incurred when the city hosted his Oct. 10, 2018, Make America Great Again rally at Erie Insurance Arena. City officials are still trying to have him settle that tab before he shows up for a new rally.

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