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'Pain in the neck': CNN expert reacts to Trump's unusual courtroom request

Donald Trump wants to hear every question the judge asks prospective jurors in a highly unusual request from the start of his hush money trial.

The former president asked Judge Juan Merchan to allow him to stand beside the bench to listen in on one-on-one conversations with individuals who might be tasked with deciding on whether to convict Trump of falsifying business records to conceal payments that flowed to adult movie actress Stormy Daniels in an effort to cover up an affair,

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Ex-Trump aide says Republicans have 'made peace' with hush money case

"The View" opened Monday with footage of Donald Trump entering the New York criminal courthouse as he faces the fraud trial over the Stormy Daniels hush money scheme.

"I mean, Melania has barely been seen in the last few months," Ana Navarro said of Trump's wife.

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'Shrunken' Trump looks as if the 'reality of the trial' has hit him: legal expert

MSNBC's Mika Brzezinski showed Donald Trump as he entered the New York courthouse on Monday for jury selection in his hush money election interference and fraud trial.

After Trump spoke inside the courthouse, the "Morning Joe" host noted he was "making a few lies there" — particularly as he repeated his claims that the case has no merit and it's a political witch hunt orchestrated by President Joe Biden.

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'Overwhelming evidence!': Former Trump aide says Alvin Bragg has the goods to convict

While dressing down Speaker Mike Johnson for paying fealty to former President Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago, former White House spokesperson Anthony Scaramucci predicted his ex-boss is going to be outmatched on the evidence alone.

"What are you doing, standing next to that guy," Scaramucci figuratively asked about Johnson while appearing on CNN. "And what happened to the backbone of the Republican party? How did you let this guy hijack the entire party, the party of Lincoln and Reagan, and throw it in the toilet like this?

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'Very boring': Rev. Al Sharpton laughs at reason Alvin Bragg isn't a good target for Trump

Donald Trump has spent much of the past few years attacking prosecutors, judges or anyone else involved in court cases against him but, according to Rev. Al Sharpton, he won't have much ammunition when it comes to hush money prosecutor Alvin Bragg.

Nicolle Wallace began the conversation on MSNBC Friday with questions about jury selection, which begins Monday in the criminal case.

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'Ethically compromised': Ex-colleague of Trump lawyer says no choice but to quit team

Donald Trump's lawyer Evan Corcoran quietly left the legal team in recent months, CNN reported Thursday — though Trump's staff is swearing he's still working for the former president.

Speaking to CNN Friday, former prosecutor and current defense attorney Shan Wu seemed confused by the comment.

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Ex-prosecutor reveals the 'most devastating witness' to Trump's hush money defense

Former federal prosecutor Harry Litman, who now serves as a legal analyst for the Los Angeles Times, pinpointed one witness he believes will be the "most devastating" in Donald Trump's hush money criminal case.

Speaking to MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace on Thursday, Litman addressed longtime Trump loyalist Hope Hicks, who had been with the ex-president from his company into the final weeks of his White House.

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'Scared' Trump has 'something deep to lose' at hush money trial: ex-president's biographer

Monday is the beginning of Donald Trump's New York trial that will decide whether he is just as guilty as Michael Cohen was in the hush money scheme involving an adult film star.

Trump, who faces 34 felony counts in the case, is accused of paying off Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election to keep her mouth shut about their purported affair. Despite three attempts this week to delay the trial, it is moving forward. All the while, a new poll shows that 64 percent of Americans see the matter as serious, Reuters reported.

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'More choices': Kari Lake appears to drop previous hardline pro-life stance in new video

Kari Lake flipped again on her stance for women's reproductive freedom Thursday, easing off her hardline pro-choice stance and saying she wants to make sure 'every woman who finds herself pregnant has more choices."

After teasing a release of her position late Wednesday, she dropped a more than 5-minute video where she uses the words "choice" and "choices" twice within the first 28 seconds of the video.

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'We're seeing Trump flail': Morning Joe delights as consequences catch up

Panelists on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" mocked Donald Trump and other Republicans who are now "flailing" to contain the political fallout from the Arizona Supreme Court decision to reinstate a Civil War-era ban on abortion.

The former president issued a statement Monday boasting about his role in overturning Roe v. Wade but insisting that reproductive rights should be left to the states to decide, and host Joe Scarborough said that widely unpopular ruling was just another arrow in President Joe Biden's quiver to use against Trump.

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'The cover-up': Expert says Trump hush money case hangs on one person's testimony

Donald Trump will become next week the first former president to stand trial in a criminal court that could hang on the testimony of a former fixer with a criminal record who says he was following the boss' orders.

Legal analyst Neal Katyal spoke with MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace Wednesday about the hush money case — in which Trump stands accused of falsifying business records to hide payments made to adult film star Stormy Daniels — slated to head to court in New York City on Monday.

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Alvin Bragg 'neutralized' key defense witness with jailing of Trump CFO: expert

Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner thinks jurors in the New York hush money trial will want to know where Donald Trump's CFO Allen Weisselberg — who was jailed Wednesday — is during the proceedings.

Weisselberg was jailed on New York's Rikers Island again after he pleaded guilty to perjury after having lied under oath in his former boss' fraud trial.

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'Grow a spine': Ex-Trump aide urges scared officials to stand up against former boss

Miles Taylor, the former chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security, has become a kind of corraler of ex-Donald Trump officials willing to come out against him.

Speaking to MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace on Tuesday, Taylor revealed he spoke to one former Cabinet official who has not been willing to come out publicly yet but is against a second term.

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