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2024 Elections

'Prince of darkness' DeSantis flattened for 'bizarre, twisted, deviant' pitch to voters

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," branding expert Donny Deutsch expressed confusion about a recent Ron DeSantis ad that seems to have alienated more people than it has increased his presidential hopes.

The ad, which sought to tie Donald Trump to the LGBTQ community has been roundly criticized for a variety of reasons by conservatives and liberals alike, and that led to "Morning Joe" regular Deutsch to scorch the Florida Republican and label him the "Prince of Darkness."

After host Willie Geist shared the clip for the MSNBC panel Deutsch remained puzzled about exactly whom the ad was aimed to influence.

"First of all, DeSantis is flailing," he began. "He is trying to continually move to the right of Trump. This LGBTQ thing is just -- do you think this is moving voters? Are you trying to peg Trump as a patron of this group?"

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"You know, as an ad guy, there is one thing I learned over the years, people aren't stupid," he elaborated. "I don't know the voter that will see that and go, 'You know, DeSantis -- you're my guy.'"

"DeSantis is a dark, dark, dark character," he continued. "I've talked a lot about it on the show, how at the end of the day, candidate Trump, even though, you know, we eviscerate him, there is a likability if you are a Trump guy about him. He's entertaining, a lounge act, this and that."

"This guy [DeSantis] is just dark, the prince of darkness. That is one of the darkest, most bizarre, twisted, deviant ads I've ever seen," he added.

Watch the video below or at this link.

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This Republican presidential candidate has a $20 million plan to screw with Donald Trump

First, the bad news for Republican presidential candidate John Anthony Castro.

His chances of winning the 2024 GOP presidential nomination sit somewhere between zero and infinitesimal.

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Federal judge tosses election deniers' Oregon lawsuit over mail-in voting

A federal judge has tossed a lawsuit intended to end mail voting and electronic voting tabulation in Oregon, saying “generalized grievances” about the state’s elections aren’t enough to give a group of unsuccessful Republican candidates and other election deniers standing to sue.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Stacie F. Beckerman dismissed the suit late last month. Plaintiffs, led by former school superintendent and 2022 Republican gubernatorial candidate Marc Thielman, are appealing her ruling.

“Plaintiffs allege that Oregon’s computerized vote tabulation and mail-in voting systems violate their constitutional rights, including violations of the Due Process Clause, the Equal Protection Clause, and their fundamental right to vote,” Beckerman wrote. “Plaintiffs allege that ‘organized criminals’ are manipulating Oregon’s elections, and they base their claims on a documentary about voting irregularities in other states and reports of voting irregularities in Oregon.”

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Ron DeSantis doubles down on controversial anti-LGBTQ ad amid criticism

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Wednesday defended a controversial ad that touts his opposition to LGBTQ rights and calls out Donald Trump over his past support for such rights, the news website OutKick reports.

The ad has been described as “homophobic” and “divisive and desperate” by fellow Republicans. It was posted by the DeSantis War Room twitter account and has been viewed more than 24.6 million times as of Wednesday.

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Fulton County GOP sues after member who challenged eligibility of thousands of voters is rejected from elections board

Republicans in Georgia's most populous county are suing local elected officials they accuse of rejecting one of their party's nominees to the elections board because he wanted to "clean up its voter rolls," the Associated Press reported.

The Fulton County Republican Party sued the county Board of Commissioners to appoint Jason Frazier to the county Board of Elections and Registration. Frazier has recently filed challenges to the eligibility of thousands of voters in the county, which is a Democratic stronghold.

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Ron DeSantis 'should be pulled off the campaign trail' immediately: political analyst

At least one political analyst is urging Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) to leave the presidential campaigning to his surrogates.

DeSantis, struggling in the polls, spent the Fourth of July holiday participating in two parades. But political analyst Tara Newsom told WFLA's Mahsa Saeidi that the governor may not be doing himself any favors.

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Ted Cruz insists Biden whistleblower is credible because he's a 'gay Democrat married to a man'

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) argued that an IRS whistleblower was more credible than other officials because the "gay Democrat" would have had no reason to lie about President Joe Biden's son Hunter.

On his Verdict podcast this week, Cruz blasted U.S. Attorney David Weiss and Attorney General Merrick Garland because Biden's son was not expected to face jail time for a plea deal related to tax crimes.

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Trump stays home while other Republican presidential candidates join July 4 celebrations in key states

Ron DeSantis was in New Hampshire. Mike Pence was in Iowa. And Donald Trump was home at his New Jersey golf course. Republican presidential candidates fanned out across early voting states to march in Fourth of July parades on Tuesday, while Trump stayed put at his Bedminster resort with little reason to stump for himself given his mammoth lead over the field. DeSantis pressed the flesh in a morning parade in Wolfeboro, N.H., on the shores of Lake Winnipesaukee, a well-heeled resort area where moderate Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, owns a sprawling summer home. The Florida governor also visited Me...

Republicans are struggling to sell extremist positions on campaign trail: former GOP staffer

Former adviser to Speakers John Boehner (R-OH) and Paul Ryan (R-WI), Brendan Buck, revealed on Tuesday that Republicans are struggling to come up with a way to sell extremist views, particularly when it comes to Roe v. Wade being eliminated.

In a panel discussion, Buck revealed that Republicans have no idea what to say about abortion after spending a generation trying to bring down laws that prevent the government from regulating women's healthcare.

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New Hampshire candidate's ties to oxy manfacturer 'death knell in a general election'

Cinde Warmington, a Democrat running for governor of New Hampshire next year, has sought to prioritize fighting the opioid epidemic. In one ad, she promises to “finally tackle the mental health crisis and fentanyl crisis in a real way, so that families can get the help they need.”

There's just one problem, reported The Daily Beast: two decades ago, Warmington was a lobbyist for Purdue Pharma, defending their right to sell OxyContin, a powerful opioid painkiller that helped trigger the crisis in the first place.

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'He comes with a lot of baggage': GOP candidates 'thankful' Trump sitting out July 4

Republican candidates are glad Donald Trump is sitting out July 4 from campaigning.

The Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary are still more than six months away, but GOP candidates expressed relief they don't have to contend with the ex-president on the campaign trail as they glad-hand at Independence Day events, reported the New York Times.

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Trump opened the door for the  'politics of menace and intimidation': extremism expert

Extremism reporter David Neiwert outlined how former President Donald Trump brought domestic extremists to the forefront of American politics in a Daily Beast article adapted from his new book, "The Age of Insurrection."

Neiwart spent much of his career covering the modern generations of political violence in the United States, including the rise of the Aryan Nations in Southern California.

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Trump flips out overnight on 'major sleazebag' Jack Smith with conspiracy accusation

Late Monday night, going into the July 4th holiday, Donald Trump fired off another attack at special counsel Jack Smith who has already slammed him with a 37-count indictment in a Florida courtroom.

With multiple investigations looming related to a fake 2020 presidential elector scheme and a possible indictment in New Jersey tied to Trump's mishandling of sensitive government documents at his Bedminster golf course, the former president has kept up a steady drumbeat of attacks on Smith and his investigators.

Late Monday night was no different.

RELATED: 'He’s toast': Legal expert warns Trump’s only hope is a Republican coming to save him in 2024

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