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'This dude is dirty': Lindsey Graham hit with MAGA fury for 'contradicting' Trump

U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham is experiencing heat from the MAGA wing of the Republican party after publicly contradicting Donald Trump.

Graham said in an interview that he didn't believe government officials who investigated Trump's connections to the events of Jan. 6 while he was still in office the first time, such as Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, deserved prison time.

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'Surprised you are asking me about politics': Army-Navy attendees blew off Trump visit

Tailgaters who attended the annual Army-Navy game had little to say about president-elect Donald Trump bringing a posse of his insiders to the game on Saturday, with most telling the Washington Post they were there for football and not politics.

According to the Post report from Emily Davies and Leigh Ann Caldwell, one admitted Trump voter, Gregg Holgate, 56, wasn't interested in talking about the man he just help elect, telling them it wasn't a topic of conversation outside the stadium.

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'We are so cooked': Trump insider attacks James Comer after he backs AOC for top position

Rep. James Comer (R-KY) faced backlash from Laura Loomer, an insider close to President-elect Donald Trump, after he endorsed Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) as ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee.

During a Sunday interview on Fox News, host Arthel Neville noted that Comer was a "member of the AOC fan club."

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'A Pearl Harbor moment': Fox News host amps up hysteria over drone sightings

Rep. Jim Himes (D-CT) disputed Fox News host Jacqui Heinrich after she suggested drone sightings were a "Pearl Harbor moment" for Americans.

During an interview on Fox News Sunday, Himes agreed that the federal government was responsible for ensuring drones were not flying over sensitive government facilities.

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'Traps' ahead for Mike Johnson as he seeks House Speaker re-election: Politico

Current House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) appears to have a clear path to his retaining his seat as the leader of the Republican Party majority House for now, but Politico reports there are pitfalls facing him with such a slim majority.

As the report notes, major opposition to Johnson has melted away after he allied himself more closely with Donald Trump who subsequently offered his approval.

Politico's Jordain Carney and Olivia Beavers are reporting, "... his [Johnson's] improved fortunes are attributable to three main factors, all things he’s played an active role in: Bringing his defectors into the fold and hearing them out, punting a huge funding fight into early next year and securing President-elect Donald Trump’s endorsement."

ALSO READ: Here's what happens when the world's richest man buys the presidency

It only takes one renegade Republican House member to derail his re-election with Politico reporting Democrats will not be coming to his aid this time where "he has almost no room for error in January."

Getting to January is another matter.

There are still some traps remaining that Johnson will need to avoid. Conservatives are still watching closely to see how Johnson handles a Dec. 20 government funding deadline, including the details of any disaster aid money," the report states before adding, "If Johnson had agreed to a mammoth end-of-year spending bill, known as an omnibus, it could have sparked conservative ire at the worst time for the speaker."

The report also notes that there is no appetite among his colleagues to run as an alternative candidate.

According to Rep. Ralph Norman (R-SC), "Who are you going to get? Who wants it?”

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'A sex crime!' Fox News pundit smacks down panelist for downplaying Hegseth as 'womanizer'

Fox News pundit Lucy Caldwell called out OutKick founder Clay Travis after he called Pete Hegseth, the defense secretary nominee, an alleged "womanizer" instead of acknowledging sexual assault allegations.

During a Sunday panel discussion on Fox News, Travis condemned media coverage of Hegseth's nomination.

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Chris Christie predicts 'drone vigilantes' as he insists they are 'over my house'

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) warned of "drone vigilantes" and insisted that the unidentified vehicles were flying over his home.

While speaking to ABC News host George Stephanopoulos on Sunday, Christie revealed that he had observed drones in his neighborhood.

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'Grotesquely hypocritical': McConnell buried by columnist for finally fretting over Trump

Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin took Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) to task for recently giving a speech where he took a swipe at Donald Trump "America first" policies he plans to implement after he is sworn in next year.

In a recent speech, the senior Republican never mentioned the president-elect's name but told a crowd in California, "But let’s be absolutely clear: America will not be made great again by those who are content to manage our decline."

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Legal expert raises alarm over 'shocking, astonishing, disturbing' Devin Nunes intel job

During an appearance on MSNBC on Sunday morning, former U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade raised red flags over Donald Trump's appointment of Truth Social exec Devin Nunes as chairman of the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board.

Speaking with MSNBC fill-in host Melissa Murray, the former prosecutor claimed that, with all of the president-elect's problematic nominations, allowing Nunes access to sensitive intel secrets may be the worst of all.

McQuade got right to the point, calling the appointment, "A shocking, astonishing, disturbing, and fill in your descriptor, conflict of interests."

ALSO READ: The reckoning: Plenty of hurts coming for the people who didn't care about their country

"As chairman, Devin Nunes will have access to all of the intelligence that is gathered by the intelligence community," she explained. "The idea is that he is supposed to be the president's eyes and ears over the intelligence community. With that information, and simultaneously serving as the head of Truth Social, it means he has the ability to post things he shouldn't know but also as Rick Wilson points out, the fact that Truth Social receives funding from foreign governments, while they are also targets of our intelligence come is deeply disturbing."

"If someone had to go through a routine background investigation, those conflicts would be flagged with screaming sirens and I would imagine that most presidents, most offices of personnel management would find him to be a nonstarter," she added.

"But here we have Donald Trump putting [him] in place, knowing about this conflicts," she suggested. "I think of all of the appointments, this conflict might be the most disturbing."

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Bernie Sanders: Insurance CEO shooting 'totally unacceptable but' anger is 'rising up'

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) blamed the murder of a health care CEO on "people's anger" about unfair insurance practices.

During a Sunday interview on Meet the Press, host Kristen Welker noted that Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) suggested that Luigi Mangione allegedly shot and killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson because "you can only push people so far and then they start to take matters into their own hands."

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Lindsey Graham: Pete Hegseth is willing to release sexual assault accuser from NDA

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said he expects former Fox News host Pete Hegseth to be confirmed as President-elect Donald Trump's defense secretary unless someone comes forward to confirm anonymous allegations about alleged drinking problems and sexual assault.

"I'm in a good place with Pete, unless something I don't know about comes out," Graham told NBC's Kristen Welker on Sunday. "These allegations are disturbing, but they're anonymous."

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'These people are so full of it': MSNBC host blisters GOP lawmakers over Trump's nominees

During a discussion on the wide array of Donald Trump's more than problematic Cabinet nominees, former RNC chair Michael Steele finally had enough and ripped into GOP lawmakers who he claims will rubber-stamp every one of them.

According to Steele, now co-host of MSNBC's "The Weekend," the nominee's visits with Republican senators is nothing less than a "sham."

"It is such a farce!" he exclaimed. "These people are so full of it, they are going to sit down, they are going to pontificate and they going to bend over and kiss the behind on this process and that is how this will play out."

ALSO READ: The reckoning: Plenty of hurts coming for the people who didn't care about their country

"All of this drama right now, 'I have concerns,' is just crap because they don't have the will to do the right thing on [Kash] Patel, Tulsi Gabbard or RFK Jr. or on anyone else who is ill-equipped and unfit to serve in these important positions," he asserted.

"And the American people will be sitting back here in 18 months going, 'Well, what the hell happened?'" he predicted.

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A St. Louis cop sent a Black man to prison — the jury never heard about the officer’s past

Crouched behind a dumpster in a St. Louis alley, Officer Steven Pinkerton heard gunshots.

It was after midnight on Aug. 10, 2013, in the Dutchtown neighborhood and an argument that had been building for hours among a group of young men had escalated into a shootout. Pinkerton said he saw two men rush by the mouth of the alley, shooting as they ran. He couldn’t see what happened next — if anyone had been shot.

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