Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Bank

Mockery as video shows big-name Republican hit with 'brutal' snub from rock legend

A former GOP governor was brutally snubbed by a Rock n' Roll legend who refused to high-five him in front of a packed Thursday night crowd.

Bruce Springsteen was sharing the love with his fans as he walked through the audience of one of his concerts. When "The Boss" came to Chris Christie, the one-time Republican governor of Springsteen's home state of New Jersey, he chose to take a hard left and leave the former presidential hopeful hanging.

Keep reading... Show less

Congressman hit with horrific voicemail threats

Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL) has been targeted with violent and antisemitic voicemails from multiple people, according to TMZ.

Moskowitz, who is Jewish, is well-known for trolling President Donald Trump's allies in congressional hearings.

Keep reading... Show less

'These are murders': 13 named as victims in Trump's boat bombings

The 57 confirmed bombings of boats that the Trump administration has carried out so far since last September have shattered families and communities across Latin America, with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and US Southern Command never acknowledging the identities of the at least 192 people they’ve killed, beyond declaring them “narco-terrorists.”

But despite the concerted effort to keep the names and any information about the victims hidden—their identities “blown away over vast stretches of ocean,” as a new report states—20 journalists led by the Latin American Center for Investigative Journalism (CLIP) managed to identify 13 of the men whose killings have been called “murders” by legal experts and rights advocates.

Keep reading... Show less

'Appalling and horrifying': 'The View' unloads on Trump's Epstein-linked China delegation

Hosts of ABC's "The View" called attention to President Donald Trump's decision to include disgraced Hollywood director Brett Ratner in his China delegation, even though he was named in the files on Jeffrey Epstein.

During Friday's program, co-host Joy Behar noted that Epstein was still "looming large over this administration" after survivors participated in a Capitol Hill hearing this week.

Keep reading... Show less

New pictures of Epstein that were once thought to have been destroyed

Vanity Fair photographer Christopher Anderson discovered never-before-seen photographs of Jeffrey Epstein on an old hard drive while preparing to move to Europe, years after believing the images had been destroyed.

Anderson photographed Epstein at his New York City townhome for a story that was eventually spiked, Vanity Fair reported.

Keep reading... Show less

Epstein 'frantically' tried to turn compound into 'private town with own police': report

In the lead up to Jeffrey Epstein’s second criminal indictment in 2019, the disgraced financier had “frantically” tried to turn his secretive compound in New Mexico into a “private municipality with its own governance structure and potentially its own law enforcement jurisdiction,” journalist Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez exclusively reported on Friday.

A resident of New Mexico, Valdes-Rodriguez has uncovered a number of revelations regarding Epstein largely revolving around Zorro Ranch, including that the property may have been used to surveil two U.S. nuclear weapons labs using software compromised by Israeli intelligence.

Keep reading... Show less

'Almost feel sorry for him': Onlookers cringe at JD Vance's 'please clap' moment

Vice President JD Vance prompted second-hand embarrassment online after his applause line fell flat.

The cringeworthy moment came Friday during a speech at the Annual National Peace Officers’ Memorial Service as part of National Police week, but the 41-year-old vice president failed to land what seemed to be intended as an applause line decrying violent attacks against police officers.

Keep reading... Show less

Washington Opera flourishing after bailing due to Trump's Kennedy Center chaos

Six months after dramatically departing the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to escape President Donald Trump's takeover of the institution, the Washington National Opera is experiencing unexpected success — expanding its artistic reach and attracting a groundswell of new support from donors nationwide.

The opera company's departure from its longtime home came after Trump stacked the Kennedy Center board with loyalists and had his name added to the facade, New York Times reported on Friday. But rather than crippling the organization, the move has enabled it to flourish.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump loyalist turns to AI after election fraud theory shot down by Patel’s FBI: report

Former Rep. Dan Bishop (R-NC), tapped by President Donald Trump to oversee a Justice Department (DOJ) probe into his false 2020 election fraud claims, is using generative artificial intelligence to pursue a theory rejected by Trump’s own FBI, The New York Times reported Friday.

Retiring from Congress in 2024, Bishop was among those who refused to certify former President Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 election. His appointment last month to oversee a sweeping DOJ investigation, The Times wrote, was seen as “the latest example of the Trump administration putting untested loyalists in charge of sensitive criminal inquiries that feed into the president’s political agenda.”

Keep reading... Show less

GOP in 'crazy territory' as red state governor accused of election 'strong-arming': report

Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry's attempt to play kingmaker in the state's Republican Senate primary, aggressively "strong-arming" donors and party insiders to support Donald Trump's preferred candidate, is backfiring and alienating fellow Republicans who view his interference as an abuse of power.

On Saturday, Louisiana Republicans head to the polls to test a fundamental question the national GOP is wrestling with: Can Trump's endorsement topple an entrenched incumbent who has dared to defy him — even in a state Trump won by 22 points?

Keep reading... Show less

This George Costanza theory explains everything about how Trump's team lies: analyst

President Donald Trump's Cabinet members and nominees have had to pass a loyalty test and often debase themselves publicly to keep their jobs — it's what an analyst has dubbed "the Costanza presidency."

In a Substack post published Friday, Tom Schaller, professor of political science at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, detailed just how far Trump's allies have been willing to take their lies, even refusing to deny Trump lost the 2020 election. This "favorite lie" is something Trump has come to expect from his faithful followers and people within his inner circle, he wrote.

Keep reading... Show less

'Unprecedented': Court hit with blistering demand to throw out Trump lawsuit

A federal court's own appointed attorneys filed a blistering brief Wednesday arguing that Donald Trump's $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS may be flatly unconstitutional — because, as Trump himself put it, he's essentially suing himself.

"This case is unprecedented," the court-appointed lawyers wrote in a 24-page filing this week. "A sitting president seeks monetary damages for alleged harm to his personal interests from an executive agency that he controls."

Keep reading... Show less

Steve Bannon warns 'trench warfare' has been triggered by 'dumb' GOP mistake

MAGA strategist Steve Bannon pushed red states to plow forward with redistricting efforts because he said that if Democrats win the House by a single vote, "they're gonna run it like they got a 50-seat majority."

During a Friday interview with GOP adviser Caroline Wren, Bannon insisted he couldn't "get excited" about Republican redistricting efforts because party leaders were leaving seats on the table. He pointed to failures to draw new district maps before the midterms in Indiana and Georgia — despite pressure from President Donald Trump.

Keep reading... Show less