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Defense contractors spent $70 million lobbying ahead of annual defense budget bill

This article originally appeared in OpenSecrets. Sign up for their weekly newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

In the first half of 2023, defense contractors and other defense sector players spent nearly $70 million lobbying the federal government. Much of this lobbying concerned the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act, an annual appropriations bill funding the Pentagon and military operations. Lobbyists are legally required to report third quarter spending on Oct. 20.

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GOP congressman — a retired Navy SEAL — uses foreign warship photo in salute to U.S. Navy

Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-MT), whose political identity is closely associated with his background as a Navy SEAL, recently extended birthday wishes to the U.S. Navy on social media — using what appears to be an image of an Indonesian warship.

In a birthday message on X, formerly known as Twitter, a transparent silhouette of the word “NAVY” was overlaid on the ship.

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Sen. J.D. Vance finally dumps stock in 'slave labor' company

Freshman U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) has sold up to $100,000 in stock he owned in Walmart — a full two years after he bashed the company for using “slave labor” and robbing middle-class Americans of jobs.

Vance made a “full" sale of Walmart on Oct. 3, according to a document filed Monday with the U.S. Senate.

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Trump ‘stiffs law enforcement officers’: Nikki Haley, citing Raw Story

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley issued a statement Monday based on a recent Raw Story article, calling on former President Donald Trump to pay law enforcement who protect his presidential campaign events.

Haley cited Raw Story’s article “Siren: New Hampshire town eats Trump security bills while Haley pays local police,” where Raw Story obtained documents through an open records request showing that Trump’s June 27 visit to Concord, N.H., cost the local police and fire departments $3,778.85.

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'100% pro-Trump' House candidate Bo Hines fined nearly $12,000

The campaign committee of failed Republican U.S. House candidate Bo Hines, a hard-core Donald Trump supporter who narrowly lost his high-profile race in North Carolina, was fined nearly $12,000 by the Federal Election Commission for federal campaign finance violations, according to records released today by the agency.

The FEC accused Hines of failing to properly disclose numerous last-minute campaign contributions during both the primary and general election phases of his North Carolina District 13 congressional race. Taken together, the properly disclosed contributions totaled $112,400, the FEC said.

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Why 'money is not a panacea' in Election 2024: Raw Story Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal

Candidates running for the presidency and Congress just released some gaudy new fundraising numbers, but Raw Story Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal warned to view the big-dollar totals with a healthy dose of skepticism.

"You have to have money in order to be competitive. You absolutely have to have it. If you don't have money, the chances of you winning are next to nil," Levinthal told host Justin Robert Young on the "Politics! Politics! Politics!" podcast. "But money is not a panacea. Money will not alone win you a race. Just ask Michael Bloomberg in the last presidential election. There has to be a confluence of factors — money, popularity, the factors on the ground, the news of the moment — that conspire in a positive way for you to be successful as a candidate."

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Dem senator used to bash lobbyists. Now they're feting him at exclusive D.C. fundraisers.

WASHINGTON — Just before Democrat Bob Casey entered the U.S. Senate a political generation ago, he railed at his incumbent Republican opponent, Rick Santorum, for selling himself out to lobbyists.

“You’ve been the Senate liaison to K Street, which is a mess, which is a place of corruption and influence peddling,” Casey said in a 2006 debate with Santorum. “And you spend a lot of time on K Street and you’ve been spending a lot of time with people that practice the politics of influence peddling on K Street.”

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'We are idiots': Republican officials attack GOP for continuous speaker failures

WASHINGTON — After it became clear that Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) was never going to get the votes to be Speaker of the House, some Republican members resigned themselves to the idea of Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-NC) presiding over the votes for funding bills.

The far right isn't happy about it. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) is 100 percent against it, saying that the GOP is broken.

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Video shows neo-Nazi leader interviewing with Tennessee mayoral candidate’s campaign aide

Neo-Nazis in Tennessee continue to exploit their relationship with Franklin mayoral candidate Gabrielle Hanson, using their newfound notoriety to recruit followers and convey threats toward local journalists and progressive politicians.

A new video featuring a 20-minute conversation between neo-Nazi and Tennessee Active Club leader Sean Kauffmann and Valerie Baldes, an aide to Franklin mayoral candidate Gabrielle Hanson, provides a platform for Kauffmann to openly promote Nazism while spreading hate against Jews and LGBTQ people. During the interview, Kauffmann described anti-fascists as “the foot soldiers of the Judeo-capitalists” while equating LGBTQ people with pedophilia.

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Siren: New Hampshire town eats Trump security bills while Haley pays local police

Another small town’s taxpayers have footed the bill for a political visit from former President Donald Trump.

This time: Concord, N.H., the Granite State’s capital city.

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Who's running the House? We asked 20 House members and got these 20 (non)answers

WASHINGTON – The House isn’t just speaker-less, it also appears to be rudderless.

Things are so bad in the GOP, House Republicans can’t even agree on who isn’t leading them now that Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) has twice tried — and failed badly — to win enough votes to earn the speakership.

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Revealed: The massive caveat in Trump’s newly certified personal financial disclosure

More than two months after filing a federally required financial report, former President Donald Trump got approval Tuesday from the U.S. Office of Government Ethics — with a notable caveat.

“OGE notes that several of the assets on this report are the subject of dispute in the case of New York v. Donald Trump, et al.,” said an unusual notation on Trump’s public financial disclosure report, which was certified Tuesday by Shelley K. Finlayson, acting director, chief of staff and program counsel for the Office of Government Ethics.

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Republican urges Jordan to stay in speaker race: 'It took McCarthy 15 counts'

WASHINGTON — Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) lost his second floor vote for Speaker on Wednesday – this time he had three fewer votes than his first vote, which gave him 200.

But Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN) told Raw Story he thinks Jordan should still stay in the race.

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