Video

'She can go to hell!' J.D. Vance lashes out at Kamala Harris amid Arlington Cemetery furor

Former President Donald Trump's running mate, Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH), lashed out at Vice President Kamala Harris during a Wednesday rally speech in response to media scrutiny over the Trump campaign's possibly unlawful photo event at Arlington National Cemetery.

In particular, he sought to blame her for the deaths of soldiers in Afghanistan during the U.S. withdrawal from that country.

Keep reading... Show less

'Head-spinning': Pulitzer-winning historian says 2024 election unlike any since 1968

A Pulitzer Prize-winning presidential historian shared Wednesday why she feels the 2024 election cycle is the most "head-spinning" she's seen in decades.

Presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin appeared on CNN's "OutFront" with Erin Burnett. Burnett asked if this election season — with the assassination attempt, Joe Biden's unceremonious exit from the race following a disastrous debate performance and the first Black and Asian woman winning the Democratic nomination — has left Goodwin's head "spinning."

Keep reading... Show less

Fox News poll ought to be 'alarming' for 'flailing' Trump campaign: CNN political analyst

A political analyst said Republicans ought to be alarmed over a new Fox News poll that he said shows a "consistent story" that Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris has closed the gap against Donald Trump in key Sun Belt states.

Fox News sent out statewide surveys to 1,000 registered voters in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina. The surveys were conducted after the Democratic National Convention and after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. endorsed Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump surrogate refuses to disavow RFK Jr's suggestion COVID was a racial bioweapon

A campaign aide for former President Donald Trump deflected Wednesday over whether the campaign supports conspiracy theories put forth by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Corey Lewandowski refused to give a straight answer when confronted by MSNBC's Ari Melber over whether the campaign stands behind Kennedy's many fringe theories now that the Trump campaign is using him as a surrogate.

Keep reading... Show less

'Try smiling': Megyn Kelly launches sharp — and personal — attack against CNN anchor

Right-wing talk radio host Megyn Kelly went after CNN correspondent and anchor Kaitlan Collins with personal invective on her SiriusXM show this week, using charged language to attack her character and personality.

Kelly was particularly riled by Collins defending her network's coverage on HBO's "Real Time with Bill Maher" as "fair" and a network that "both sides can watch."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump lawyer: Re-indictment proves Biden wants to keep Trump 'off the campaign trail'

Donald Trump's lawyer Todd Blanche suggested on Fox News that the latest superseding indictment from the Washington, D.C. grand jury comes directly from President Joe Biden.

Speaking to Gillian Turner, standing in for Martha MacCallum on Wednesday, Blanche explained that having special counsel Jack Smith refile the indictment, taking the Supreme Court's rulings into account, is a conspiracy.

Keep reading... Show less

Watch: J.D. Vance flubs name of location where U.S. soldiers died in Afghanistan

Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) on Wednesday continued to attack President Joe Biden for the withdrawal of American forces from Afghanistan -- but during his remarks, Vance seemed to confuse the gate where a suicide bomber killed 13 American soldiers with a street in London made famous by the Beatles.

During a campaign event, Vance was asked about an incident at Arlington National Cemetery when officials of the cemetery told Trump's campaign that they couldn't take photos in the Iraq and Afghanistan section and that no political activity could happen on cemetery grounds.

Keep reading... Show less

'All bad people': Conservative laments as Trump attracts 'weird' new supporters to GOP

Conservative commentator Matt Lewis lamented on the latest episode of his podcast with Washington Monthly's Bill Scher about how his longtime Republican Party has devolved into a cult of "weird" people who now set the agenda and have chased any reasonable, serious people out of the fold.

This came as they discussed the fact that former President Donald Trump has been toying with the idea of replacing Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance, already himself a bit of a fringe figure, with conspiracy theorist and former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on his ticket.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump floods social media with 'explicit' and 'vengeful' memes after new indictment

Donald Trump responded to the news of the grand jury passing down a superseding indictment in the past 24 hours with a flood of memes that MSNBC reporters called "vengeful" and "explicit."

Speaking to MSNBC Wednesday, Vaughn Hillyard showed a handful of posts Trump shared on Truth Social. One image showed a number of Democrats and Bill Gates behind bars and in orange prison uniforms. The caption reads: "How to actually 'fix the system.'"

Keep reading... Show less

'Huge landmine': Ex-Trump lawyer identifies Jack Smith's risky gamble in new indictment

Special counsel Jack Smith made a risky gamble in his new indictment against Donald Trump, according to one of the former president's defense attorneys.

The special counsel trimmed down the case against Trump and a grand jury still indicted him on all four core charges in the election interference case, and his former defense attorney Jim Trusty told CNN that Smith reworked the case to exclude testimony from a former Department of Justice official in the wake of the Supreme Court's immunity ruling.

Keep reading... Show less

'Very brilliant move': Legal expert says Jack Smith just made Judge Chutkan's job easier

During an appearance on "Morning Joe" MSNBC legal analyst Danny Cevallos applauded the effort special counsel Jack Smith put into going before a grand jury and getting a superseding indictment against Donald Trump related to the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Speaking with fill-in hosts Jonathan Lemire and Katty Kay, Cevallos explained that Smith trimmed down his charges against the former president which will make it harder for the conservative Supreme Court to intercede on his behalf.

Asked to "walk us through what happens next," Cevallos explained, "Normally a superseding indictment is something that strikes fear into the heart of a criminal attorney like me. It usually means that government has found more defendants or they've found more bad evidence and are charging more crimes. It's rare that you have a superseding indictment that reduces information."

ALSO READ: Trump is losing his audience

"Ultimately the only thing I care about is the counts, and all four counts remain," he pointed out. "That means if the defendant is convicted the sentencing guidelines will be exactly the same. All Jack Smith's team has done is taken a look at the indictment and said 'What should we remove that insulates us?' And, yes, they removed references to Trump's attempts to subvert the DOJ and maybe install a new acting attorney general, but they keep in language about vice president Pence, which signals to me that Jack Smith's team is feeling very confident."

"They've kept all four counts and they're keeping in conduct and the Mike Pence conduct is significant because the Supreme Court suggested that this at least was entitled to the presumption of immunity," he added. "So Jack Smith is signaling that even conduct that may be entitled to a presumption of immunity, it is full steam ahead. They are not afraid of the district court and any possible hearing; they are going forward with these counts."

"So as much as, yes, this indictment has been, I guess, reduced in length, everything that matters is still in it," he continued. "This is a strategic, I think a very brilliant move to keep this indictment alive, to head off any problems at the pass before Judge Tanya Chutkan has to hold a hearing making, I think, her job even easier."

Watch below or at the link.

Keep reading... Show less

'No evidence whatsoever': Trump smacked down for blaming Harris for assassination attempt

CNN's Alayna Treene fact-checked Donald Trump's suggestion that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were to blame for his apparent assassination attempt.

The former president sat down for an interview that aired Tuesday night with "Dr. Phil" McGraw, saying that the president and vice president, who has since become the Democratic nominee, were partially responsible for failures that allowed a 20-year-old registered Republican to climb atop a roof at a Butler, Pennsylvania, campaign rally and fire off shots that may have struck his ear, killed a supporter and seriously wounded two others.

Keep reading... Show less

'Repels a lot of Latter-day Saints': Pro-Harris Mormon hits out at Trump's God talk

While Mormons have long been some of the most loyal Republican voters, Vice President Kamala Harris's campaign believes their distaste for former President Donald Trump gives them an opening in several states.

Appearing on CNN Wednesday, Rob Taber of the organization Latter-day Saints for Harris-Walz broke down exactly why some Mormon voters are rethinking their partisan loyalties this year, as Trump sits on the top of the Republican ticket for a third consecutive election cycle.

Keep reading... Show less