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2024 Elections

‘As long as possible’: Inside Republicans’ power play to keep Texas red amid wave of blue

Republicans in the Texas legislature recently passed two bills that will affect how elections will be run in the state’s largest county, Harris County — a Houston-centered Democratic stronghold.

The first bill gets rid of Harris County’s elections administrator entirely, and the second allows the state’s Republican secretary of state to directly oversee elections in the county. These moves have been referred to as a Republican “power grab” by Democrats in the state.

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Here are two paths to booting Judge Aileen Cannon off the Trump Espionage Act case: legal experts

According to three leading scholars specializing in federal government ethics laws, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida Judge Aileen Cannon needs to either recuse herself or be preemptively forced off overseeing the trial of Donald Trump related to special counsel Jack Smith's investigation of the former president.

In a column for Slate, legal experts Norm Eisen, Richard Painter and Fred Wertheimer present multiple paths for the Trump-appointed Cannon to be ousted either using federal laws or allowances under Florida state law.

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Miami Mayor Francis Suarez teases upcoming California speech as possible 2024 campaign launch

MIAMI — Miami Mayor Francis Suarez teased a “major announcement” this week during a round of television interviews that aired Sunday morning, hinting that he may formally launch a campaign for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination during a speech in California on Thursday. Suarez, 45, appeared on Fox and Telemundo, where he was asked about his political ambitions and about the significance of an appearance scheduled for Thursday at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library outside Los Angeles, California. Suarez has said for months that he is considering a run for the GOP nomination. “My an...

'Those tapes are my tapes!' Trump enraged by Jack Smith's evidence against him

Former President Donald Trump on Sunday confirmed the existence of audio recordings that could be used as evidence against him in a case about the mishandling of classified documents.

During an interview on Sunday with host Roger Stone, Trump responded to reports indicating he admitted he did not declassify some documents before leaving office with them. Those recordings are reportedly in the hands of special counsel Jack Smith.

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2 more Republican candidates enter Michigan's US Senate race

DETROIT — A lawyer who helped bring a lawsuit challenging the validity of thousands of Detroit absentee ballots ahead of last fall's election launched a campaign last week for the Republican nomination for Michigan's open U.S. Senate seat. Attorney Alexandria Taylor, 42, of Romulus last week called the upcoming Senate race "pivotal" and said she would bring "strong conservative/family values" to the race. She intends to focus on education, energy independence, securing the border, issues of national security and the shortage in law enforcement officers, she said. "I do believe that we need uni...

Trump is walking into his 37-count federal indictment 'blinded to the danger he is in': analyst

According to one political analyst, Donald Trump's rich history of involvement in civil lawsuits has given him a false sense of security as he faces real jail time should he gets a guilty verdict in any one of the 37 federal charges in his indictment.

In a column for Politico, Jack Shafer wrote that the former president has long boasted he knows the ins and outs of the court system after decades of civil lawsuits filed against himself and his Trump Organization.

Because of that, Shafer suggested the former president is in for a rude awakening when he is arraigned in Florida next Tuesday.

Writing that "Trump has been a party to so many legal actions — both suing and being sued," that he feels he has a handle on how to direct his attorneys to proceed, Shafer added that the former president's previous experience has "blinded him to the danger he is in."

Shafer added that civil suits are "the padded playroom in which Trump has cavorted his entire professional life," and he explained that jail time was never on the table with them. But now it is.

RELATED: Trump set for a 'brush with reality' if he attempts his favorite legal tactic with Jack Smith: former prosecutor

"Criminal cases don’t pit one person or organization against another. They are reserved for crimes against the state or society, and the plaintiff isn’t Joe or Doris or some regulatory body, it’s the big, angry fist of government. When you lose in this venue, you don’t write a check. You’re often sentenced to prison," he explained before adding, "Prosecutors seek justice, not compromise, and they’re relatively immune to the field disturbances that rattle civil litigators. Did Trump’s attorneys not tell him that?"

The analyst added that the newest indictment related to top secret government documents he refused to return could have been the easiest case to avoid by just complying.

"Inside his own bleached skull, Trump must now be imagining that he can run out the criminal clock too, just as he did in so many civil cases," he wrote.

He concluded, "A normal person would not assume they could win all four or five (or however many) criminal cases. A normal person would never put all his eggs in the single basket that says, 'Win the White House, Get Out of Jail Free.' A normal person would never count on DeSantis to deliver. And a normal person would never find himself in this pickle. But Donald Trump is not a normal person."

You can read more here.

'Saddest case' Lindsey Graham buried by authoritarian expert for clinging to Trump

According to the author of "Strongmen: Mussolini To The Present," Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) has revealed himself to be a classic example of someone who attaches himself to an authoritarian leader in an effort to be close to power.

Appearing on MSNBC on Sunday morning, with host Ali Velshi, Ruth Ben-Ghiat of New York University dissected the South Carolina Republican's career turn that has led him to be one of Donald Trump's biggest defenders after tweeting back in 2016: "If we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed.......and we will deserve it."

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'There ought to be some evidence': Fox News host busts guest blaming Biden for Trump's indictment

Fox News host Howard Kurtz called out Mollie Hemingway of The Federalist after she suggested President Joe Biden had ordered the arrest of former President Donald Trump.

"I accept the need for the conversation," Kurtz told Hemingway on his Sunday Media Buzz program. "I just think that if you're going to accuse President Biden of personally doing it, there ought to be some evidence."

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'Lindsey Graham is not well': Senator mocked for deflecting to Hillary Clinton in off-the-rails ABC interview

United States Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) was mocked and corrected on Sunday after he falsely compared the federal indictments filed against former President Donald Trump by Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith to the exoneration of Hillary Clinton by the Federal Bureau of Investigation ahead of the 2016 election.

The drama began during a contentious interview on ABC News' This Week.

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'They usually look like idiots': Dem lawmaker taunts Jim Jordan to 'bring it on' with Trump defense

Appearing on MSNBC early Sunday morning, a Democratic member of the House Oversight Committee taunted fellow lawmaker Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) for threatening hearings over Donald Trump's 37-count federal indictment, saying she welcomed the opportunity for him to fail once again.

Speaking with host Katie Phang, Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) laughed when the host brought up the Ohio Republican's name whose "DOJ weaponization" committee hearings which have turned up no wrongdoing.

"You serve on House Oversight with Jim Jordan," host Phang prompted. "Jim Jordan loves to send those fast and furious letters demanding a whole bunch of stuff that never quite gets what he wants. Are you concerned at all that he and his other Republican colleagues will abuse Oversight for the purpose of interfering in Trump's prosecution?"

RELATED: 'What you're saying just doesn't make sense': CNN's bash cuts off Jim Jordan rant about Trump indictment

"There has been nothing but abuse on Oversight, to be clear," the Texas Democrat laughed. "But the American people should know by now that the House Oversight Democrats are some of the strongest advocates you can have, and allow the hearings that they really thought they were going to go in and really gets something damning -- they turned up nothing."

"In fact, they usually look like idiots by the time we're done with them," she told host Phang. "So they can try if they want to, but let me tell you the House Oversight Dems will be bringing that smoke -- so, I say 'bring it on if this is what you want to do.'"

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'Let me finish!' Lindsey Graham explodes at host during full meltdown over Trump indictment

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) raised his voice in anger on Sunday during an interview about the federal indictment of former President Donald Trump.

While appearing on ABC's This Week, Graham was asked if he still believes Trump did nothing wrong despite dozens of federal charges.

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'They want him to die in jail': Nancy Mace spins wild conspiracy theory about Trump indictment

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) suggested on Sunday that the federal indictment of Donald Trump was a plot to distract from President Joe Biden''s alleged scandals.

"Nancy Mace, you called this, okay?" Fox News host Maria Bartiromo told Mace. "I heard you last week say, now that we have this FBI document [about Joe Biden], we'll see what they come up with in terms of changing the conversation. That is exactly what happened."

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'What you're saying just doesn't make sense': CNN's Bash cuts off Jim Jordan rant about Trump indictment

During an extensive interview most notable for Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) refusing to stop talking and allowing host Dana Bash to fact-check him, the CNN host was finally forced to cut off the conservative lawmaker and point out he was rambling instead of answering her questions.

Asked on to discuss the 37-count federal indictment that former president Donald Trump is facing, Jordan ranted about the politicization of the Department of Justice -- a central theme of hearings in the House Judiciary Committee he heads -- and then launched into diatribes about former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Pressed about a Trump admission on a recently revealed tape that he possessed sensitive documents that he had not declassified -- a central part of the DOJ's case -- Jordan stated, "Not if he declassified it when he was President of the United States, for goodness' sake."

"He is saying point blank in this audio tape he did not declassify it," Bash interjected. "What you're saying just doesn't make sense on its face."

"Dana, what this truly is, Dana, is an affront to the rule of law," Jordan attempted.

"It is an affront to the consistent application of the law," he continued. "You have Secretary Clinton who had classified material on a server. She was not President of the United States. She was Secretary Clinton. You have that happen and nothing happens to her."

"The only one indicted is the one who was president and did it the right way," he later insisted. "Oh, my goodness. That is what the American people see."

Watch a portion of the interview below or at the link:

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