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2024 Elections

Tough-on-crime GOP presidential candidate pleads ignorance after violating financial disclosure law

Larry Elder, the tough-on-crime conservative talk radio host and longshot Republican candidate for president, blew past a federal deadline for filing a personal financial disclosure report, Raw Story has learned.

The violation could result in a fine. But it’s unlikely Elder will pay much — if anything — because of notoriously weak enforcement of federal laws governing lawmakers’ mandatory personal financial disclosures.

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'Bordering on whiny': DeSantis' 'lackluster' campaign ripped apart by columnist

Recent news seems to suggest that Ron DeSantis' presidential campaign is tanking, citing polls showing him trailing Donald Trump by more than 30 points while Fox News confronted him on his diminishing star power. According to CNN's Dean Obeidallah, while DeSantis looked good on paper for a GOP frontrunner, he wasn't immune from Trump's personal attacks – and that is why his campaign is floundering.

In response to the attacks, DeSantis tried taking the high road. But Trump's only escalated his taunts -- to which DeSantis still tried to pull his punches.

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'Getting out of hand': GOP candidates are battling to show their 'masculine toughness' and 'testosterone'

When Russian President Vladimir Putin was photographed shirtless during the Barack Obama years, many far-right Republicans argued that the United States would be better off if Obama could be that macho. Quite a few progressives responded by mocking their messaging as pathetic and buffoonish, yet that Republican obsession with hyper-masculinity continues.

In an article published by Politico on July 10, journalist Adam Wren focuses on a trend in the 2024 GOP presidential race: male candidates trying to win over voters by showing how "masculine" they are.

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Trump's foes are blowing their chance to destroy him by thinking 'it's still early': columnist

Donald Trump's 2024 opponents are making the mistake of thinking there's plenty of time to destroy him, Washington Post columnist Philip Bump warned Monday.

By adopting a 'we're a long way from voting' attitude at this stage of the race means they could find out they've left it to long to launch an effective campaign against him, he said.

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'Roiling with conspiracy theories': RFK Jr.’s 'madness' abounds in New Yorker interview

Much of the Democratic Party, from centrists to progressives, is rallying around President Joe Biden's 2024 reelection campaign. But Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., one of Biden's presidential primary challengers, has been enjoying favorable coverage in right-wing media. Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson has been praising Kennedy's anti-vaxxer views and applauding him as a thorn in the side of the Democratic establishment.

Many mainstream media outlets have avoided giving Kennedy a platform, as they view his anti-vaxxer claims as unscientific and dangerous. But The New Yorker's David Remnick interviewed him for an article published in Q&A form on July 7.

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Democrat Roland Gutierrez enters Democratic primary targeting Ted Cruz in 2024

State Sen. Roland Gutierrez, D-San Antonio, announced Monday he is joining the Democratic primary to challenge U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas.

Gutierrez made his campaign official in a nearly four-minute video that starts with him driving to Uvalde, the city in his district where a deadly school shooting took place last year. He says the massacre was about more than guns but also about how Texas leaders have neglected the state.

“I'm running against Ted Cruz because everything that we’ve seen in this state has been nothing but taking care of rich people while the poor people, the working class, get screwed over,” Gutierrez said.

The video also singles out Cruz for his 2021 trip to Cancun during the power-grid collapse in Texas, calling it “just indefensible.” And it also takes shots, briefly, at other state GOP leaders, including Gov. Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Gutierrez’s entrance into the 2024 race has long been expected, and it sets up a primary matchup with U.S. Rep. Colin Allred of Dallas, who announced his campaign in May.

Gutierrez has been in the Legislature since 2008, but he became more vocal than ever after the Uvalde tragedy. He spent the 2023 legislative session pushing for new gun restrictions, delivering passionate floor speeches and holding regular news conferences with families of the Uvalde victims.

“I’m a proud gun owner and believer in the Second Amendment, but after 19 children and two teachers died, the Republicans would’t even allow us an opportunity to even talk about ways to protect our kids,” Gutierrez said in the video. “It’s why we have to do something now.”

Gutierrez has faced resistance in the Republican-dominated Legislature, but he notched at least one victory in May when a House committee surprised many by advancing a bill to raise the minimum age to buy some semi-automatic rifles from 18 to 21. The bill did not go further.

The Uvalde gunman legally purchased two AR-style rifles shortly after turning 18 and only days before killing 19 students and two teachers at Robb Elementary School.

More recently, Gutierrez successfully amended the Senate’s latest property-tax plan to include pay bonuses for public school teachers. It is unclear if the House will go along with the plan in the current special session.

Gutierrez began in the Texas House before winning election to the Senate in 2020.

Gutierrez faces a serious opponent in Allred, who has already picked up a number of national endorsements and has raised more than $6 million. He also transferred $2.4 million from his House campaign account.

Allred’s campaign has brushed off talk of primary opponents, saying he is focused on defeating Cruz, who is seeking a third six-year term.

Another Democrat in the Legislature, Rep. Carl Sherman of DeSoto, also is considering running for Senate.

Democrats have not won a statewide election in Texas since 1994. Democrat Beto O’Rourke came surprisingly close to defeating Cruz the last time the senator was on the ballot, in 2018, but the party has not been as competitive in a statewide contest since then.

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The future of free and fair elections in Wisconsin could hinge on the fate of one woman

Just prior to the long July 4th weekend, a number of dramatic events occurred regarding the future of fair and free elections in Wisconsin and specifically the immediate direction that the Wisconsin Elections Commission (WEC), the state agency that oversees our state’s elections, will take leading into the critical and all-important 2024 presidential election year.

Back in 2015, the majority (then and now) Republican state Legislature, together with then-Republican Gov. Scott Walker, engineered the destruction of the effective and nationally heralded non-partisan Government Accountability Board (GAB). The GAB had been established with near unanimous bipartisan support in 2007 in the wake of the infamous Legislative Caucus Scandal of 2001-2002 which resulted in the criminal prosecution and removal from office of five of the top legislative leaders of both political parties. Republicans sought to replace the GAB with a more pliable and partisan entity that they hoped would provide them with greater partisan advantage in future elections.

The result was the establishment of the partisan-appointed WEC which was devised and set up with only Republican input and support — with no buy-in or even consultation with nonpartisan organizations like Common Cause Wisconsin and without any bipartisan legislative support. In 2019, Republican legislators unanimously voted to install the current WEC Administrator, Meagan Wolfe, replacing Mike Haas, who had held the position since 2015.

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Dem leader launches campaign to become Missouri's first woman governor

The top Democrat in the Missouri House officially launched her campaign for governor early Sunday morning, taking direct aim at her likely GOP rivals while touting efforts to restore abortion rights and block foreign ownership of farmland.

State Rep. Crystal Quade, 37, is the first major Democratic candidate to enter the field to replace Gov. Mike Parson next year. In an introductory video announcing her campaign, she discussed being raised by a single mom and relying on food stamps before touting her record in the legislature.

“I committed myself to working for families like the one I grew up in,” she said. “Now I’m a leader in the state House, where I’ve stood up for workers against corporate special interests, sponsored a law to stop China and Russia from buying our farmland to squeeze out Missouri farmers and I’m leading the fight to restore our abortion rights.”

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At annual gala, Florida Democrats look to unify around a common adversary: Ron DeSantis

Florida Democrats, hoping to claw their way back from the brink of political irrelevance, seized on Gov. Ron DeSantis’ struggling presidential campaign on Saturday to unite a deeply fractured political coalition ahead of the 2024 elections. The Florida Democratic Party’s annual “Leadership Blue” weekend at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach was billed by party leaders as a kind launch party for a more aggressive, reenergized state party after years of financial difficulties and lackluster election results. Throughout the day on Saturday, state and local party members met in various workshops and se...

'A big whale in a polo shirt': Guest nails Newsmax host for hypocrisy on Trump's physical fitness

Columnist Ellis Henican pushed back against Newsmax host Michael Grimm for criticizing President Joe Biden's leisure time while ignoring former President Donald Trump's White House vacation history.

During a Sunday morning segment about Biden's trip to a Delaware beach, Grimm complained about the image of the president.

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DeSantis at risk of losing it all 'in the next couple of weeks': former GOP House member

Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) has struggled to explain why he's still considered a viable candidate when his poll numbers are sinking despite a heavy campaign schedule. Headlines all include words like "stalling," "sagging," and "struggling to find its footing," MSNBC's Alex Witt explained at the top of the hour.

She played a clip of DeSantis appearing on Fox with Maria Bartiromo, who asked how he can still justify his campaign when he's such a failure. DeSantis blamed it on the media.

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'You're too stupid!' Rudy Giuliani slams his radio listeners over White House cocaine 'cover-up'

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani said only "stupid" people believe that the White House is not covering up the origins of a small amount of cocaine found last weekend.

"Biden never tells the truth. It's almost useful when they say something when somebody like that little lying press secretary that he has, the one who's now given us three different places [for] the cocaine," he said on Sunday. "I mean, they're a mouthpiece — they're a mouthpiece for the crooked White House. How can you possibly say the day after that you just found out about the crime that's not — you're not going to solve it...Can you imagine if there's a murder this morning, and the acting police commissioner shows up and says let me think about this? This may never be solved."

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Former Trump aide schooled by Bakari Sellers after attack on Kamala Harris

Former Donald Trump White House communications official Alyssa Farah Griffin was called on CNN's "State of the Union" by co-panelist Bakarie Sellers after she claimed Vice President Kamala Harris is hurting President Joe Biden's re-election bid.

During a discussion about Biden's prospects of being re-elected, Farah Griffin suggested Harris is a drag on the ticket, telling host Jake Tapper, "You have an unpopular vice president in Vice President Kamala Harris who is polling beneath Joe Biden."

"Usually the VP's job is do no harm and give people confidence that you can step in the next day and be that president and that would be a drag on for someone with me that is a neither-sider," she insisted.

"First of all, I have to address the first part," Sellers immediately replied. "I mean she's the first vice president of the United States that doesn't look like any of the other ones that came before her."

"And the first woman and first person of color," host Tapper interjected.

"Correct," Sellers replied. "And the media is struggling to figure out how to cover her as well as she was trying to figure out how to do the job well."

"The vice presidency is not a job that comes with the glitz and glamor and she's not held to the same standard of Mike Pence, so I want to clarify that," he added.

Watch below or at the link:

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