Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Latest Headlines

ICE plans to convert Big Lots warehouse into detention center blown up by tribal nation

Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been dealt yet another setback in its hunt for a new detention site in Durant, Oklahoma, as a tribal nation opposed to its plans bought a disused warehouse it was eyeing.

According to Michael Wriston's Project Salt Box, the Choctaw Nation has purchased the 1.24-million-square-foot warehouse, previously operated by discount retail chain Big Lots.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump reveals major Iran development as pressure mounts at home

President Donald Trump signaled that negotiations were underway with Iran — and that he would pause military strikes — while simultaneously attacking the media in a new social media announcement.

Trump has come under fire over the American public's response to the joint U.S.-Israeli military strikes in Iran, as calls have increased for the conflict to end as oil prices rise and the stock market takes serious hits. He said that the Iranian government requested to stop the strikes amid the talks to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the second time Trump has said he would pause strikes.

Keep reading... Show less

Ex-Border Patrol chief pushes to deport nearly one-third of US population

Former Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino celebrated his retirement by pushing to deport 100 million U.S. residents.

During a Thursday appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, Bovino told Nick Sortor that he wanted to deport nearly one-third of the U.S. population, even though most of them are citizens.

Keep reading... Show less

'They're going to get destroyed': CPAC attendee delivers brutal verdict on GOP

A young voter at the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, on Thursday delivered a bleak outlook on the Republican Party ahead of the upcoming midterm elections.

Conservatives were gathering in suburban Dallas, Texas, for the event, which was the first time that President Donald Trump did not attend after taking over as the Republican Party leader. CNN senior reporter Steve Contorno was talking to attendees and describing the ongoing conversations around MAGA and its future, the Iran war and concerns about Trump's "America First" mentality.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump aides resort to 'aggressive brownnosing' as his polls hit sub-Biden lows: report

President Donald Trump's top officials have been laying it on thick as his poll numbers take a beating.

The 79-year-old president tries to project nothing but total confidence in himself, but MS NOW's Anthony L. Fisher noticed that his high-ranking administration officials seem to be publicly trying to boost his flagging self-esteem.

Keep reading... Show less

Republicans panicking as Trump allows far-right 'bigots' to tear the party apart: report

Far-right extremists trading in outright "bigotry" are infiltrating and raising their profiles in the Republican Party ranks, and GOP leaders are sounding the alarm — but Donald Trump is giving them a pass.

According to The Washington Post, 23-year-old Alec Beaton epitomizes the problem. He has solid GOP credentials: former precinct delegate, county Republican youth chair, and Trump 2024 campaign field operative in Michigan. He's also a self-described Holocaust "revisionist" who treats Hitler praise as entertainment.

"We don't think Hitler is, like, the worst person ever," Beaton said while circulating through a national young conservatives conference, accompanied by an acquaintance working for the host organization, Turning Point USA.

"We influence the room," Beaton boasted, identifying as a groyper. "We have the power and influence to come in here, and they respect it."

Party insiders dismiss figures like Beaton as marginal players unrepresentative of mainstream Republicanism. But anxiety is spreading through GOP ranks. Leaked offensive group chats and escalating disputes over acceptable political boundaries are exposing a deeper problem: the party's young far-right contingent is gaining traction.

The real concern centers on white-supremacist influencer Nick Fuentes, who targets disaffected young men and has expressed his worldview bluntly: "Jews are running society, women need to shut the f--- up, Blacks need to be imprisoned for the most part, and we would live in paradise." This month, the College Republicans of America appointed a longtime Fuentes devotee as their political director.

The GOP is fracturing over how aggressively to confront this radicalization. Some Republicans dismiss Fuentes and his ilk as irrelevant online noise — infiltrators sabotaging the party. Others warn the movement has real momentum and demands forceful expulsion from the GOP.

The underlying threat concerns Republicans: the online ecosystem financially rewards extremism through clicks, likes, and followers.

"The migration of our politics online has created a perverse incentive structure," said David Brog, founding president of the foundation behind the annual National Conservatism Conference. "If you voice anti-Israel and antisemitic views, you get an instant reward in the form of clicks, likes and follows. This fuels the fallacy that the activist base of the party shares these views."

"So ambitious politicians and commentators trying to position themselves to lead 'America First' are misreading these digital leaves," Brog continued, "and coming to some deeply flawed conclusions."

The California Republican Party last month distributed a memo to state GOP leaders warning that groypers were securing party positions and running for office, demanding organized resistance.

"A radical and divisive iteration of 'America First' ideology is growing within the ranks of the Right wing in American politics that is directly at odds with the core founding principles of the United States Constitution," the memo stated. "The effects of this movement on our conservative American youth cannot be ignored."

California GOP Vice Chair John Park acknowledged the urgency. "This is one of those situations where silence is consent," he said, though he cautioned against overstating the problem's scale.

Trump, however, is taking the opposite approach. Asked about former Fox News host Tucker Carlson's decision to interview Fuentes, Trump offered a non-answer that functioned as tacit approval.

"I don't know much about him," Trump said of Fuentes — a claim contradicted by their 2022 dinner meeting, an incident that sparked widespread outrage.

Senate scrambles for DHS deal before two-week recess: 'Time for us to do our job'

WASHINGTON Lawmakers were cautiously optimistic on Thursday as the Senate was trying to reach a deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security and end the government shutdown.

In a series of exclusive interviews with Raw Story, several senators explained how they were uncertain whether a deal could be reached as Congress was just hours away from its two-week April recess.

Keep reading... Show less

'You think I'm that stupid?' Judge snaps as defendant on Zoom call lies she's not driving

A Michigan judge was stunned when a civil defendant joined a Zoom call hearing while driving her car, in footage originally obtained by Fox 2 Detroit and reposted by CBS News — and then lost his patience when she tried to deny she was the driver, despite it being clearly visible on camera.

According to People Magazine, the defendant, Kimberly Carroll, was being sued by a debt collection company for around $2,000, and her case was before Woodhaven District Judge Michael K. McNally.

Keep reading... Show less

'People, come on!' CPAC host shocked after audience doesn't boo Joe Biden

Mercedes Schlapp, the host of the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, seemed stunned after her audience declined to boo former President Joe Biden.

During a conversation with border czar Tom Homan on Thursday, Schlapp asked the Trump official to "compare the Biden years."

Keep reading... Show less

ICE insider claims they had 'no idea' Trump team plotted new deployment for agency

An Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent has claimed the department had no idea they would be deployed on a new operation.

Donald Trump's team has placed ICE agents in airports across the country to assist the Transportation Security Administration during the Department of Homeland Security's shutdown. TSA employees have been increasingly absent as the shutdown affects their pay, with about 3,400 TSA agents calling out of work on Sunday, according to BBC.

Keep reading... Show less

'Let me finish!' Senate Republican loses his cool as he's fact-checked on his own bill

Sen. Jon Husted (R-OH) clashed in a conversation with CNN host Brianna Keilar that left the GOP lawmaker tongue-tied during a live broadcast on Thursday.

The Republican got in the fiery back-and-forth with Keilar after the anchor started asking Husted about the SAVE America Act and raised questions over whether the legislation backed by the Trump administration and conservatives would disenfranchise voters. Husted was reacting after a vote on his voter ID amendment failed, while President Donald Trump has pressured Republicans to end the filibuster, fund the Department of Homeland Security and pass the SAVE America Act.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump losing top Fox News ally as MAGA host warns of 'cascading problems'

President Donald Trump has apparently started to lose support from one of his loyal Fox News allies as doubts rise over his decision to continue the war against Iran, according to reports on Thursday.

Fox News host and conservative ally Laura Ingraham had a skeptical response to the Trump administration's war on Wednesday night during a live broadcast, Media Matters for America reported. Ingraham warned that as the United States escalates its military action in the Middle East, it could prompt dire and "unintended consequences." She argued that Trump and his administration should focus on America's economy and political situation.

Keep reading... Show less

'Put America first!' CPAC attendee 'not happy at all' with Trump

CNN's Donie O'Sullivan talked to one attendee at the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, who slammed President Donald Trump over his war in Iran.

"I'm at CPAC in Dallas," O'Sullivan explained on Thursday. "It's the biggest conservative conference in the country. And lots of people here are talking about the war in Iran. Trump is not speaking at this event this year."

Keep reading... Show less