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'Troubling reports' point to Kash Patel having 'personal slush fund' of taxpayer dollars

A top House Democrat is accusing FBI Director Kash Patel of running a "personal slush fund" of taxpayer dollars to pay loyalist agents in his inner circle.

Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat and the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, sent a letter to Patel — obtained exclusively by MS NOW — alleging the bureau chief has doled out more than $1 million in illegal "bonus" payments to agents on his personal detail and his Director's Advisory Team.

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Trump-endorsed candidate's challenge backfires as Dem hits back on child sex offender deal

Texas state Rep. James Talarico, the Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate, responded to his Republican opponent’s “barbecue debate” challenge issued on Monday with a challenge of his own, one that put the Trump-backed candidate’s controversial record in the spotlight.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton challenged Talarico Monday to a debate to be held at a barbecue restaurant, a debate designed to verify whether Talarico actually enjoys barbecued meat as he’s claimed. The unorthodox challenge comes as Republicans take continued potshots at Talarico's masculinity.

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Red state's next move may be to purge Democrats entirely

When the Republican-led Tennessee legislature in May carved up the state’s one remaining congressional district represented by a Democrat it was acting openly on a morally gruesome principle.

In a state where more than a third of voters are reliably Democrats (per the last two presidential elections) Republicans find it unacceptable that the percentage of congressional House seats held by Democrats treads water at 11% — one of Tennessee’s nine seats. This cannot stand, they mouthfoamingly cogitate, so we must draw new lines that drown the enemy and make it zero.

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Election officials warn Trump's order is bringing them a 'nightmare' before the midterms

As election officials across the country steel themselves for the midterm elections in less than five months, President Donald Trump’s executive order restricting voting by mail threatens to upend their preparations.

The executive order instructs the U.S. Postal Service to refuse to deliver ballots in states that don’t provide lists of voters or meet other requirements. It has created a sense of deep uncertainty and concern among election officials as they consider how to comply, according to a review of court documents and interviews with election officials and experts on election administration.

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Swing state GOP voter points to 'negative' Trump detail that 'would shock a lot of people'

A Georgia Republican voter who showed up early to cast his ballot in Tuesday’s primary admitted that Donald Trump’s endorsement caused him to skip voting in the governor’s race.

Reporting from Marietta, MS NOW’s Nnamdi Egwuonwu shared an interview with a self-identified Republican voter who gave his name as Bank W.

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Laughter as workers put peroxide in algae-filled Reflecting Pool': '0 scientists in admin'

Workers were spotted dumping hydrogen peroxide by the gallon into the Reflecting Pool days after President Donald Trump's $14.2 million renovation turned it green.

CBS News journalist Bob Kovach was on the ground at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool Tuesday morning. He posted a video of gallon jugs labeled "hydrogen peroxide" lined up at the water's edge, with workers kneeling beside them and pouring the chemical straight in. The pool, which Trump had painted "American flag blue" and refilled just 12 days ago, has since turned a mossy green.

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'Why even bother?' Trump stuns after casually folding on 'his main justification' for war

President Donald Trump stunned onlookers Tuesday after casually suggesting that the United States abandon a key demand he’s made throughout the duration of the U.S. war against Iran.

While attending the Group of Seven conference in France, Trump spoke with reporters about the freshly signed tentative peace deal his administration reached with Iran on Sunday, during which he spoke to his long-held goal of seizing Iran’s supply of enriched uranium.

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'Worst candidate possible': Georgia Republicans furious about Trump's pick for Senate race

President Donald Trump's endorsement in Georgia's Republican Senate primary runoff has triggered sharp anxiety within the state GOP, and party strategists are warning that could cost them a crucial seat this fall.

The 80-year-old president endorsed Rep. Mike Collins (R-GA) days before Tuesday's primary runoff against Derek Dooley, the former football coach backed by Gov. Brian Kemp. The MAGA congressman had led Dooley by 10 points in the May 19 primary, but Republicans fear his conservative profile — built for a reliably red congressional district — will not translate to a general election audience, reported MS NOW.

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Trump ballroom project's true cost revealed in newly unearthed documents

Internal contractor estimates reveal that President Donald Trump's East Wing replacement project carries a price tag far exceeding what he has told the public – with taxpayers footing most of the bill.

The Washington Post obtained a project summary prepared for the White House by contractor Clark Construction in early March that estimated the total construction cost at $600 million — $200 million more than the maximum figure Trump has ever cited publicly.

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Trump at 'most critical moment' of presidency that could save – or sink – GOP: report

As President Donald Trump takes victory laps after having secured a tentative peace deal with Iran, he’s also reached what Punchbowl News described Tuesday as “perhaps the most critical moment of his presidency” – a “potential pivot point” that could ultimately save – or sink the GOP this November, the outlet reported.

“This may be the last chance for Trump and Republicans to change the subject back to the issue driving every race – the state of the U.S. economy,” Punchbowl News reported Tuesday.

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GOP candidate ridiculed for pushing literacy – in front of podium with spelling error

Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL), a gubernatorial candidate, was widely mocked Monday after a video clip of him preaching the importance of literacy went viral – for all the wrong reasons.

“Our kids have to be prepared to hit the ground running on day one, and being able to master reading is at the core of that,” Donalds said at a recent event after having unveiled his plan to improve childhood literacy.

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Republicans fear Trump's deal is 'too little, too late' to save them at the polls: report

Despite President Trump's Iran war peace deal, suspiciously announced on the weekend of his birthday, Republican campaign consultants and candidates are still bracing for a GOP midterm disaster, convinced that voter economic anxiety has hardened beyond repair before voters head to the polls.

GOP insiders close to the White House openly acknowledge that even if gas prices drop, the damage is already done. Voter perceptions of economic hardship are "baked in and irreversible," according to Republicans interviewed for Politico reporting.

According to the report, the political math is shaping up to be devastating for Republicans. Trump and the GOP were already grappling with affordability concerns before the Iran war began at the end of February. Merely returning to pre-war economic conditions won't be enough to shift voter sentiment, GOP strategists argue—particularly given that economic anxiety is the primary driver of midterm voting behavior.

"Economically, I don't think there's time. I think it's too late, essentially, to really change a voter's mood," confided one Republican to Politico. "But I mean, hey, I'll take it. We'll take whatever we get, right?"

The White House strategy is now damage control: laser-focused messaging that Trump improved the economy in his first term and can do it again—and that now the war is over, economic recovery can resume.

"The argument is: Trump improved the economy in the first term, he can do it again, he knows how to do it, and now the war is over, we're going to get back to it," said a White House insider. "The economic trend pre-war was actually pretty decent. Could we get back to it fast enough? I don't think so, but let's try."

However, as Politico is reporting, the Iran deal's durability is uncertain. While the U.S. and Iran have digitally signed a framework agreement to end the war, neither side has published the text, leaving critical questions unanswered about tolls for strait transiting and Iran's nuclear commitments. Israel's stated plan to remain "indefinitely" in Lebanon further threatens the agreement's viability.

A senior U.S. official acknowledged that Hormuz would be "open toll-free for 60 days," with permanent reopening remaining one of many ongoing negotiation points. Oil tanker owners remain hesitant to transit the strait due to mines and attack risks, the official conceded.

"I think we'll get a very long way there over the next couple of weeks, but it's going to take a little time because you have some crews that are extremely risk averse," the official told Politico.

Gas price relief faces a ceiling regardless. Global oil inventories have been thoroughly drained to multi-decade lows—the market is missing more than a billion gallons of crude oil supply. If the deal holds, prices could dip below $4 a gallon, according to Bob McNally, head of energy consulting firm Rapidan Energy and a former George W. Bush administration energy adviser. But low inventories will eventually reverse that trend.

If negotiations fracture, prices could spike above $5 a gallon. Either way, volatility will likely persist beyond summer as new oil supply reaches markets.

For Republicans facing midterm voters already convinced the economy is broken, even temporary gas price relief may come "too little, too late," Politico's Megan Messerly and Scott Waldman wrote.

MAGA dress rehearsal tests online army trained for midterm onslaught

The pieces are all in place for President Donald Trump and his allies to upend the November midterms by falsely claiming that the elections were rigged.

When Trump angrily insisted on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that the Los Angeles mayoral primary was “rigged” after his favored candidate Spencer Pratt lost, it unleashed a stampede of echoed claims by administration loyalists and an army of internet influencers. That eruption of unfounded fraud claims earlier this month previews a disruptive playbook likely to be deployed by Trump and his allies on Nov. 3, when congressional races across the country determine which party will control the House and Senate.

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