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Marjorie Taylor Greene personally fined for election violation: docs

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), one of former president Donald Trump’s most vociferous supporters in Congress, has agreed to pay a $12,000 fine for violating federal election law, according to Federal Election Commission records reviewed by Raw Story.

An investigation by the FEC found that Greene violated the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 when she improperly shared an ad produced by the Stop Socialism Now PAC on her campaign Facebook page and Twitter account in December 2020.

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‘Official’ Trump calendar omits a critical detail

A “2024 Official Calendar” published by Donald Trump Jr. comes replete with “Incredible photographs from President Donald J. Trump's time in the White House.”

Trump-y historical facts accompany many of the dates.

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24 climate predictions for 2024

This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist's weekly newsletter here.

Last year, climate change came into sharp relief for much of the world: The planet experienced its hottest 12-month period in 125,000 years. Flooding events inundated communities from California to East Africa to India. A heat wave in South America caused temperatures to spike above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in the middle of winter, and a heat dome across much of the southern United States spurred a 31-day streak in Phoenix of 110 degree-plus temperatures. The formation of an El Niño, the natural phenomenon that raises temperatures globally, intensified extreme weather already strengthened by climate change. The U.S. alone counted 25 billion-dollar weather disasters in 2023 — more than any other year.

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Republican congressman violates federal law with botched cryptocurrency disclosures

A Republican congressman violated a federal financial disclosure law by reporting two cryptocurrency purchases as much as a month past a mandatory deadline, a Raw Story review of congressional documents indicates.

Rep. Mike Collins (R-GA) reported two purchases of Ethereum cryptocurrency, each valued between $1,001 to $15,000.

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'Crashing together': Trump, Congress and courts headed for a collision

Key decisions in Congress, courts and the ballot box will all crash together "in a most profound way," Raw Story Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal predicted today.

"And it begins in earnest," Levinthal told "A New Morning" host Susan Rose on WBEN-AM 930.

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Five unresolved questions surrounding the Jan. 6 attack

America is coming up on the three-year anniversary of the day former President Donald Trump’s supporters stormed the Capitol. The attack upended the orderly and peaceful transfer of presidential power to Joe Biden during Congress’ certification of the 2020 election and ultimately resulted in the loss of seven lives and dozens of injuries to law enforcement officers.

The FBI has arrested more than 1,200 people on federal charges related to the siege of the Capitol. The leaders of the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys — two far-right extremist groups — are already serving long prison sentences for seditious conspiracy, and hundreds of others have pleaded guilty or been convicted by juries on various charges.

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The link between climate change and a spate of rare disease outbreaks in 2023

This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist's weekly newsletter here.

A 16-month-old boy was playing in a splash pad at a country club in Little Rock, Arkansas, this summer when water containing a very rare and deadly brain-eating amoeba went up his nose. He died a few days later in the hospital. The toddler wasn’t the first person in the United States to contract the freshwater amoeba, Naegleria fowleri, this year. In February, a man in Florida died after rinsing his sinuses with unboiled water — the first Naegleria fowleri-linked death to occur in winter in the U.S.

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Stiffed: How Trump's campaign visits cost local police departments

When former President Donald Trump makes a campaign appearance — whether its at fairgrounds in South Carolina or an Iowa fraternity house — along comes a rowdy crowd of thousands of supporters in bedazzled MAGA hats and Trump mugshot T-shirts shouting “U-S-A” chants.

And without fail, there’s local men and women in uniform — often from local police and fire departments — enlisted to provide security and keep the peace at the rallies for the former president who is facing 91 felony counts across four indictments and a New York civil trial that threatens to upend his business empire.

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Raw Story’s top 23 investigations of 2023

Early in 2023, Raw Story announced that it would heavily invest in our investigative journalism with the goal of bringing you hard-hitting and incisive news you wouldn’t find elsewhere.

Since then, Raw Story has hired a team of investigative journalists and published several hundred exclusive stories and reported commentaries that have together shone significant light into the darkest corners of politics and government.

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'You lost Ivanka': Trump the target of bogus political action committees

These are not real political action committees, but they made an official application to the Federal Election Commission:

Hey Donnie Dumbf— If Immigrants Poisoning Our Blood Why Do You Keep Breeding With Them

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Federal Election Commission employee downloaded sexual content to gov't computers: report

A paralegal specialist for the Federal Election Commission was found to have downloaded thousands of pornographic materials to his work laptops over the course of four years, according to a report released Thursday from the FEC’s Office of the Inspector General.

Nearly two years after initiating an investigation, the Office of the Inspector General reported that the employee was found to be in violation of agency policies and federal regulation by using federal property from 2018 to 2022 for unauthorized activities in “using his government-issued laptops to view and/or transfer inappropriate material from his personal cell phone to a flash drive,” the report said.

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Thief takes money from pro-Israel political action committee

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) reported theft of almost $4,700 from its political action committee — yet another example of fraud experienced by a political organization.

According to Federal Election Commission records, the AIPAC PAC had two fraudulent checks go out on Nov. 30 of this year for $2,740.66 and $1,958.82. The bank refunded the lost money to AIPAC.

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Run on broken Senate record? Nope. One embattled Dem senator explains his all-in strategy.

WASHINGTON – It’s almost 2024 and many lawmakers on Capitol Hill are in a bind.

How do you run on the record of the historically dysfunctional 118th Congress?

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