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'It makes no sense!' Clash on CNN as panelists argue over Biden election mess

Things got heated on CNN's Inside Politics Wednesday over the question of who knew what and when about President Joe Biden's cognitive decline — and whether it would hurt Democrats in the 2028 presidential election.

Biden ultimately dropped out of the race, but critics said it was too late for then-Vice President Kamala Harris to get a real foothold against Donald Trump.

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'Out of bounds': Ex-GOP strategist flags AG over ties to facility where Dem arrested

A former Republican strategist laid into Attorney General Pam Bondi on MSNBC over the recent arrests of public officials accused of interfering or trespassing on the property of federal immigration officials, most recently the prosecution of Ras Baraka, the mayor of Newark, New Jersey, after he joined a protest at a private detention facility being used by ICE.

"Since Trump took office, ICE agents have arrested several people inside the Milwaukee county courthouse, according to the FBI affidavit," said anchor Chris Jansing. "But local leaders have pushed back against these ICE arrests at local courthouses, saying it discourages people from showing up for hearings for reporting crimes. Does this kind of blurring of the lines between the court and ICE arrests help or hurt Republicans?"

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'Get out': Leading scholars flee Trump's US — cite lesson of Jews escaping Nazi Germany

Three Yale University professors who studied fascism have decided to flee the United States out of concern and fear — and they took their lead from the exodus of Jews as Hitler rose to power in Germany.

Speaking to the New York Times, historian Timothy Snyder, who writes extensively about tyranny and authoritarianism; historian of totalitarianism, Marci Shore; and Jason Stanley, an expert who studies fascist rhetoric, revealed they're moving abroad.

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'RFK kills people!' Chaos as cops drag protesters out of Senate health hearing

Capitol Police officers removed multiple protesters from a Senate hearing after they demonstrated against Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

As the Health, Education, Labor & Pensions Committee kicked off its Wednesday hearing, protests erupted just feet away from President Donald Trump's health secretary.

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'Not ready for prime time': GOP extremists and moderates unite for rare Trump defiance

A long-simmering Republican Party feud is threatening to derail President Donald Trump’s agenda.

Representatives from either ideological end of the GOP U.S. House conference, hard right and moderate center, told Raw Story on Wednesday work on the GOP’s contentious spending bill, covering tax and spending cuts and enshrining Trump's hardline immigration policy, remains a long way from done.

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Tulsi Gabbard fires two intel veterans after they undercut Trump legal argument

Intelligence chief Tulsi Gabbard fired a pair of veteran analysts whose work undercut a key legal argument the Trump administration had used in court.

The director of national intelligence dismissed the top two career officials leading the National Intelligence Council, the in the intelligence community's senior most analytical group that determines the biggest threats to U.S. security, after Gabbard's office released a declassified assessment that undercut administration claims about the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, reported CNN.

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Dems pushed to focus on strategy that makes James Comer's 'blood pressure go up 30 points'

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer's seeming disinterest in holding hearings on anything related to Donald Trump has led Washington Post analyst Philip Bump to suggest Democrats need to make life miserable for the Republican from Kentucky.

Using Donald Trump's attempt to get a free $400 million jet out from the leaders of Qatar that has even Republicans balking, Bump suggested that, should Comer refuses to hold any hearings on what appears to be a bribe, he should be held to account with either the threat of censure or by making any other hearing he convenes chaotic.

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'Horrible and really toxic': President of leading feminist group reveals why she quit

This story was originally reported by Candice Norwood of The 19th. Meet Candice and read more of her reporting on gender, politics and policy.

The president of the National Organization for Women (NOW) has announced that she will not seek reelection after five years leading the country's largest and oldest feminist organization. NOW’s next president will be elected during the group’s national conference in July.

Christian F. Nunes, the current leader, is the second Black woman to serve as national president since NOW’s founding in 1966. Nunes initially cited a desire to focus on her family, particularly her young son, as the reason for her departure. In an exclusive interview with The 19th, however, Nunes alleged that the “toxic” work environment at NOW was another key factor in her decision to exit.

“I think people were harder on me as a Black woman,” Nunes told The 19th this month. “When I came in, it was the middle of COVID. I came in during a period of crisis for the organization, but it was no grace. There was no empathy for the things I was handling. I was just thrown into it, and so I had to just swim or sink.”

That “period of crisis” Nunes referenced was an internal scandal first reported by The Daily Beast in 2020. At the time, nearly a dozen individuals reported “women of color being heckled, silenced, or openly disparaged at NOW meetings and offices,” according to The Daily Beast. Employees also signed onto an internal letter accusing the organization’s president at the time, Toni Van Pelt, of disparaging and sidelining women of color.

Two months after The Daily Beast report, Van Pelt resigned as NOW’s president, citing health concerns. Nunes, who was vice president at the time, then took over as the organization’s leader. Despite the circumstances leading to Nunes’ tenure as president, she said that her motivation to lead stemmed from NOW’s storied history paving the way for major legal changes addressing women’s economic and social equality. She also saw potential for her as a Black woman to strengthen the organization’s approach to intersectionality — going beyond issues that affect women as a whole and addressing more specific concerns that disproportionately affect women of color, as well as queer and trans women.

Nunes stated that while she believes a majority of NOW’s members remain invested in this inclusive vision, “there's a core, small group that are just really horrible and really toxic.”

A portrait of a woman.After five years leading the National Organization for Women (NOW), Christian F. Nunes has announced that she will not seek reelection as president of the organization.

(Courtesy Christian F. Nunes)

Her complaints about the organization focused on her needs as the mother of a young child with autism, and alleged disrespectful treatment from a few individuals on NOW’s 18-member national board.

The 19th reached out to NOW for a response to Nunes’ statements. A press person for the organization said they are unable to comment “because the person who would respond is Christian.” Nunes, she said, holds the top position for the main organization as well as NOW’s charitable foundation and its political action committee.

Nunes first became NOW’s vice president in May 2019 after the organization’s board abruptly removed Gilda Yazzie, an Indigenous woman and member of the Navajo Nation, from the position. Yazzie later filed a lawsuit against NOW alleging discrimination and harassment.

Nunes said she had just given birth to her son, and Van Pelt approached her about the vice presidency with a promise that Nunes would have 12 weeks of maternity leave and could work remotely for the rest of the year before moving from her home in Arizona to NOW’s headquarters in Washington, D.C., in January 2020.

After her appointment to the vice presidency, however, the tone shifted, Nunes said. NOW’s leadership allegedly told her she needed to work for six months before taking maternity leave. She began traveling for work six weeks after giving birth. She said board members also pressured her to move to D.C. sooner — she relocated in September 2019. After Van Pelt resigned in 2020 and Nunes took over, she said that she continued to face pressures that conflicted with her ability as a single mother to care for her son.

“There was a lot of people calling 9:30, 10:00 at night and expecting that I should be available,” Nunes said. “I have had a lot of comments about my decisions to set boundaries with my weekend, when we don't have board meetings. I've had comments like, ‘You're on from now 24/7,’ and I've had difficulty accepting that. I have a right to have a life. I have a right to help my family.”

Additionally, Nunes said she repeatedly faced heated questions from some board members about her decision-making and pressure to quickly resolve long-standing issues at the organization that she inherited as president. This questioning extended to Nunes’ efforts to improve NOW’s financial management processes, she said. Nunes, who has a master of business administration degree, said she brought in a third-party financial controller to provide “checks and balances” to the financial management and to address needs like the group’s account reconciliation. As a result, Nunes said she saw constant “attacking” of her credibility and leadership.

A woman speaks at a podium.Terry O’Neill, former president of the National Organization for Women, served on Nunes’ presidential advisory committee, where she says she witnessed some of the toxic behavior Nunes’ has described.

(T.J. Kirkpatrick/Getty Images)

Terry O’Neill, who served as president of NOW from 2009 to 2017, told The 19th that she witnessed some of this behavior firsthand. O’Neill and Nunes first connected after Nunes became president. Nunes asked O’Neill to join her presidential advisory committee, which gave her access to communications and meetings between Nunes and NOW’s board.

O’Neill noted that she was personally impressed with how Nunes handled the finances.

“After about four quarters, we started getting financial reports that had graphs and charts, and were so clear and easy to understand, and you could just breeze through the financial reports,” O’Neill said. “I was like, ‘Wow, this woman is for real.’”

But on multiple occasions, O’Neill said she had to “pop off” and call board members out for what she viewed as “flat out racism” against Nunes.

“I never experienced the level of hostility and sustained hostility that Christian experienced,” O’Neill said. “You want people to criticize you. … You need that as president, because it makes you better. But if you are gratuitously attacked, all it does is raise your cortisol levels. It's very bad for your health. It pushes your blood pressure up.”

John Erickson, another member of the presidential advisory committee and a former national board member, also characterized the treatment he witnessed by some board members as “outward racism” against Nunes. He spoke with The 19th about a recent board meeting held remotely during which he says members “berated” Nunes for about 20 minutes for not turning on her video camera for the meeting. Nunes attempted to explain that she was engaged in the conversation, but consoling her sick son who happened to be in her lap at the time, Erickson said.

“They continued to almost make her feel bad for being a mother and woman in leadership,” Erickson said. “That's just antithetical to, I think, NOW’s founding principles and what we should be doing and supporting.”

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See the stunning amount Musk pays adviser who's dismantling government's Tesla oversight

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

One of Elon Musk’s employees is earning between $100,001 and $1 million annually as a political adviser to his billionaire boss while simultaneously helping to dismantle the federal agency that regulates two of Musk’s biggest companies, according to court records and a financial disclosure report obtained by ProPublica.

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Centrist prompts laughter when she compares Trump's Qatari plane to getting a free puppy

A centrist commentator from Andrew Yang's Forward Party prompted laughter when she compared a $400 million plane Qatar is gifting to President Donald Trump with a puppy that former President George W. Bush received.

It was reported recently that Trump would receive a luxury plane from Qatar to replace Air Force One during his presidency. The plane will then be gifted to the Trump presidential library. Boeing was working on a new Air Force One plane, but delivery has been delayed until 2027, ABC News reported.

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'Stark' transformation sees Trump use aid group to 'bludgeon' immigrant kids

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

It started with a call. A man identifying himself as a federal immigration agent contacted a Venezuelan father in San Antonio, interrogating him about his teenage son. The agent said officials planned to visit the family’s apartment to assess the boy’s living conditions.

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Epstein victim accuses Trump admin of 'ongoing cover-up and extreme lack of transparency'

A survivor of Jeffrey Epstein’s sex assault and sex trafficking is renewing calls for the Trump administration to “release the case files about the disgraced financier,” according to an exclusive Newsweek report.

"Releasing the Epstein files must be an imminent objective," Teresa Helm told the outlet. She was assaulted by Epstein in the early 2000s.

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'Taxing poor to give to the rich': Leading MAGA Republican hammers own party

Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) came down hard on his party for meddling with Medicaid and possibly requiring co-pays for Medicaid recipients seeking medical care.

"It's reverse class warfare, is what it is," Hawley told CNN's Manu Raju Wednesday. "It's taxing the poor to give to the rich, and I'm totally opposed to that."

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