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2024 Elections

Stewart Rhodes' son fears Trump or DeSantis will pardon his father

Dakota Adams, eldest son of Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, was somewhat disappointed with the 18-year prison sentence a federal judge imposed Thursday on his convicted seditionist father.

Adams considers it too short.

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'A great week for us': Stewart Rhodes' ex-wife happy he's behind bars where he 'can't hurt' her family

Oath Keepers militia leader Stewart Rhodes may have been sentenced to 18 years in prison for his role in the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol — but the damage he has done, and could do, is still tremendous, his ex-wife Tasha Adams told CNN's Abby Phillip on Thursday.

Despite this, she said, she is glad he is in a place where he is not a danger to her family anymore.

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New House Dem leader Hakeem Jeffries faces first big test over debt ceiling: report

Less than six months after being elected House Minority Leader, Hakeem Jeffries is facing his first big test over the debt ceiling, The New York Times reports.

Assuming President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) can reach a tentative deal to extend the debt ceiling, the 52-year-old progressive from New York will be responsible for selling it to fellow Democrats.

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DeSantis is 'virtue signaling' to Trump base with threats against the FBI: Anthony Scaramucci

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has kicked off his 2024 presidential campaign by emulating former President Donald Trump's attacks on law enforcement, vowing to get rid of FBI Director Christopher Wray — a Trump appointee, but long a thorn in the side of the former president because he didn't personally shut down the Russia investigation — and suggesting he could pardon some January 6 insurrectionists on a case-by-case basis.

All of this is just a cynical "virtue signal," said former White House communications chief Anthony Scaramucci on CNN Thursday.

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Mar-a-Lago maintenance worker aided prosecutors in Trump probe: report

A Mar-a-Lago maintenance worker provided prosecutors key evidence in Justice Department’s investigation of Donald Trump over the former president’s handling of classified documents, The New York Times reports.

The maintenance worker told authorities that they witnessed an aide moving boxes into a storage room the day before a Trump lawyer met with FBI agents and a prosecutor who visited the former president’s Florida home to retrieve classified documents.

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'Increasingly solid every day': Ex-Trump White House lawyer hails Jack Smith's case against Trump

Former President Donald Trump's one-time White House attorney Ty Cobb warned that the former president is facing down serious legal jeopardy in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case on Wednesday's edition of CNN's "OutFront."

This comes amid a bombshell report in The Washington Post that not only were classified documents on display for many to see at Trump's country club, but that employees conducted a "dress rehearsal" at his demand to help him figure out which documents he wanted to conceal from authorities.

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Liz Cheney takes apparent swipe at Ron DeSantis over January 6 pardons

Former Congresswoman Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) Thursday took an apparent swipe at Ron DeSantis over the Florida governor’s comments about potentially pardoning Jan. 6 rioters.

DeSantis on Thursday said he’d consider pardoning some of those who were convicted in connection with the insurrection – including former President Donald Trump – if he's elected as president.

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‘Appalling and revealing’: White House slams RNC chair for promoting default for ‘political benefit’

The White House on Thursday fired back at a GOP leader who they accused of promoting a debt-limit default for political advantage.

A White House spokesperson issued a statement describing the efforts to play politics with potential economic catastrophe as “appalling and revealing.”

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'Slow and unenthusiastic': Trump takes a swipe at Bill Barr over failure to probe Bidens

In a post to Truth Social this Thursday, former President Donald Trump took a shot at former attorney general from his administration Bill Barr, who's made critical comments about the former president in recent media appearances.

Trump wrote that he wanted to have Joe Biden's now-infamous son, Hunter Biden, investigated during his time as president, but Barr just simply was not interested.

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Lauren Boebert says fighting 'hate and antisemitism' is code for going after conservatives

U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) said on Thursday that the Biden administration's vow to "fight hate" and antisemitism equated to a promise that they are "going after" conservatives.

Boebert, who recently filed for divorce from her husband of nearly two decades despite arguing that "strong families" are the backbone of the U.S., is known for posting controversial takes on Twitter. Earlier this month, she claimed that liberals are trying to make Earth Day about climate change when it should really be all about remembering "to appreciate this incredible world God has given us."

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Don Trump Jr. accused by ex-FBI official of setting the stage for post-indictment chaos

According to the former assistant director for counterintelligence at the FBI, Donald Trump's oldest son has been ramping up his anti-federal government rhetoric in an effort to cast doubt on indictments expected to be filed against his father in the near future.

With reports that Special Counsel Jack Smith is close to wrapping up his inquiry into the former president for taking sensitive government documents with him to his Mar-a-Lago resort and then forcing the FBI to show up with a warrant to reclaim them, Don Jr. has been accusing the FBI of fraud in a series of unrelated incidents.

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Ron DeSantis says he would consider pardoning Trump for Jan. 6

Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis (FL) confirmed on Thursday that he would consider pardoning former President Donald Trump for any charges stemming from the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election on Jan. 6, 2021.

During an interview on The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show, DeSantis was asked if he would consider pardons for Trump and other Jan. 6 defendants.

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'Vanity, ineptitude and gross misconduct': GOP hammered for sticking with Trump

On Thursday morning, the editors of Bloomberg urged the Republican Party to dump Donald Trump as quickly as possible before he becomes their 2024 presidential nominee.

The column noted that Trump's declining popularity among independents, combined with his multitude of legal problems, make him a risky nominee if the GOP is serious about regaining the White House.

Noting that there are a growing number of alternatives for Republicans to choose from, the editors wrote the former president will be a drag on other GOP candidates on the ticket, then they cut to the chase: "Two functional political parties shouldn’t be too much to ask of American democracy. At the moment, though, one of them is toying with outright disaster."

"Trump is worth opposing for all the familiar reasons, including the chaos, corruption and manifest incompetence that characterized his first term. Even ignoring all that, rejecting him is in Republicans’ self-interest," they wrote, "Electorally, Trump is (to borrow a phrase) a loser. He’s the first president since the Great Depression to have lost the House, Senate and Oval Office in a single term."

To shore up their point on the damage he will do to down-ticket Republicans, the editors noted a recent poll that showed, "putting Trump at the top of the ticket would give a five-point advantage to Democratic congressional candidates, a swing that would almost certainly give them control of the House."

Noting more mainstream Republicans who have jumped into the race, or are poised to, the editors wrote the GOP could either look elsewhere or, " ...could succumb once again to the Trump show, a cascade of vanity, ineptitude and gross misconduct that very nearly destroyed the American constitutional order."

"Really, it shouldn’t be a difficult choice," they added.

You can read more here.