Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

2024 Elections

'They need to be burned to the ground politically': Rick Wilson issues expletive-laced warning about No Labels

Rick Wilson gets the appeal of a third party in an age of hyper-partisanship.

“If you hear ‘No Labels, Problem Solvers,’ it sounds great, doesn't it?” he said.

Keep reading... Show less

How Waco got Donald Trump to pay a huge bill for his MAGA rally

For decades, former President Donald Trump has hated paying bills, be them business or political.

He especially hated the kind he felt he didn't have to pay. Notably, these include police and public safety expense invoices — now collectively worth millions of dollars — many municipal governments fruitlessly sent his presidential campaign after Trump swept into their towns to stage mass political rallies.

Keep reading... Show less

'Peaceful' Jan. 6 is reason Tennessee Dems should be expelled for using a bullhorn: Ed Henry

Disgraced former Fox News host Ed Henry, now of Real America's Voice, compared three Democrats who protested on the Tennessee House floor to Jan. 6 protesters who he said "peacefully" demonstrated.

Henry made the remarks on Thursday prior to a vote to expel Democratic Reps. Gloria Johnson of Knoxville, Justin Jones of Nashville, and Justin Pearson of Memphis. The three had spoken out about gun control on the House floor during a protest over the recent mass shooting at a Christian school.

Keep reading... Show less

'Really sick': Morning Joe bashes 'huckster' evangelicals continuing to embrace Trump

Two days after Donald Trump was indicted in a Manhattan courthouse on 34 felony counts related to the alleged payoffs to an adult film star and a Playboy model to hush up affairs that could have impacted his 2016 presidential run, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough marveled at evangelical leaders who are still sticking by the former president.

Opening Thursday's "Morning Joe," Scarborough was joined by co-hosts Mika Brzezinski and Willie Geist in expressing disgust, with Scarborough bluntly calling the Trump-supporting evangelicals "hucksters."

Keep reading... Show less

Republicans are bleeding the voters who helped Trump break the 'blue wall' in 2016: elections expert

In 2016, former President Donald Trump won by sweeping the so-called "blue wall" states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. But since then, Democrats have racked up win after win after win in these states — culminating in this week's landslide victory by Democratic-endorsed nonpartisan Supreme Court candidate Janet Protasiewicz in Wisconsin over pro-Trump former state Justice Dan Kelly.

There's one factor turbocharging Democrats' resurgence in the Midwest, argued CNN political analyst Ron Brownstein on Wednesday: the Trump-aligned Supreme Court's rescission of Roe v. Wade, and Republicans' subsequent push to ban abortion outright all over the country.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump’s indictment scrambles the 2024 race — and both parties are feeling it: NYT

A front-runner facing felony charges along with three other criminal investigations and several lawsuits would be a deal-breaker for almost any candidate in normal times.

But if the indictment of former President Donald Trump on 34 felonies in connection with alleged hush money payments to Stormy Daniels is any indication, these aren’t normal times.

Keep reading... Show less

MAGA TV host warns of 'massive assassinations' and 'death camps' after Trump arrest

MAGA TV host Dr. Gina Loudon contrasted former President Donald Trump's arrest to historic atrocities committed by Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin.

During a Wednesday interview with Christian book author William J. Federer, the host opined on the aftermath of Trump's arraignment.

Keep reading... Show less

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. registers to run for president

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the son of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy, has registered a presidential campaign with the Federal Election Commission — and is publicly testing the waters to see how much support he would have for such a run.

Kennedy, who filed his paperwork with the Federal Election Commission on Wednesday afternoon, is calling his committee Team Kennedy.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump’s former D.C. hotel — once a monument to MAGA — has forgotten its namesake

WASHINGTON – During Donald Trump’s one-term presidency, his namesake hotel, five blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House, endlessly hummed with political wheeling and personal dealing.

It served as the unofficial clubhouse for the First Family, Republican lawmakers, lobbyists, foreign dignitaries, monied donors and future convicts — from Roger Stone to Paul Manafort. This was the place to down a $100 cocktail, book a $3,600 room or pregame for an insurrection.

Keep reading... Show less

Alan Dershowitz on Trump charges: 'I think he probably will be convicted'

Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz predicted former President Donald Trump would be convicted of falsifying business records to hide an alleged affair with porn star Stormy Daniels.

During an interview with right-wing host Charlie Kirk on Wednesday, Dershowitz revealed that he would decline to represent Trump following Tuesday's arraignment in New York City.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump holds 'emergency prayer call' to boost 'supernatural wisdom'

Former President Donald Trump participated in an "emergency prayer call" after he was arraigned over hush money payments to cover up an affair with a porn star.

In a call-in event with Intercessors for America on Tuesday, Trump began by thanking spiritual adviser Paula White.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge warns Trump not to incite violence — and leaves door open for gag order

New York Judge Juan Merchan warned former President Donald Trump to tamp down his violent rhetoric in preparation for a criminal fraud trial.

During an arraignment on Tuesday, Merchan reportedly declined to impose a gag order after the former president pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records.

Keep reading... Show less

‘Beauty of this system’: N.Y. public defender on seeing Trump sit in the same seat as her indigent clients

Thieves. Stalkers. Rapists. Mobsters. Murderers. All tried and convicted in Manhattan. If DA Alvin Bragg gets his way, you can add a former president of the United States to the city’s long list of felons.

The circus-like atmosphere surrounding Donald Trump has distracted from the gravity of the moment, but for those who work in the Manhattan Criminal Court, today is both business as usual and business most unusual.

And it’s straight-up surreal to New York public defender Thalia Karny, who is intimately familiar with the spot where Trump will today stand before the law.

Keep reading... Show less