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States fight to keep certain immigrants out of census counts

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost has joined Ohio with three other states in a federal lawsuit seeking to keep certain immigrants from being counted in the U.S. Census including those in the country illegally and those with temporary visas.

The case was filed in U.S. District Court on Jan. 17 and also includes the attorneys general from Louisiana, West Virginia and Kansas.

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Missouri GOP begins tax cuts with plans for $300M slash to capital gains

Missouri Republicans took their first legislative steps toward a promised tax cut on Tuesday, with a Senate committee debating a $300 million exemption for profits from the sale of a farm, business or assets like cryptocurrency.

The proposal to exempt long-term capital gains from Missouri income tax would help bring investment and jobs to the state, said state Sen. Curtis Trent.

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Greed over Netflix studio is behind county’s bid to take over private airport: owner

The owner of a Monmouth County airport is accusing state and local officials of trying to seize his 746-acre property to cash in on a massive film production studio Netflix aims to develop a few miles away.

Alan Antaki said he has fended off a series of would-be buyers since he bought the Monmouth Executive Airport in 2013, and he balked again when county officials first signaled their intention to pursue the Wall Township property through eminent domain in 2023.

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'Hasn't been tested yet': Legal analyst envisions how Trump could warp pardon powers

Donald Trump sparked outrage by issuing sweeping pardons of all the Jan. 6 rioters, but a legal analyst speculated that the president could warp that authority beyond recognition.

Shortly after returning to office, the newly inaugurated president pardoned the insurrectionists, including Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio, who said after his release from a 22-year prison term on convictions for seditious conspiracy and other charges that the prosecutors who brought those cases should be prosecuted themselves.

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'Potential for backlash is real' for Trump's MAGA rioter pardons: expert

President Donald Trump's decision to issue a blanket pardon to rioters who stormed the Capitol four years ago is controversial even among some people who voted for him, and one legal expert thinks that the "potential for backlash is real" in the coming months and years.

Writing at Politico, former federal prosecutor Ankush Khardori argues that Trump is likely deluding himself if he believes he can simply execute a mass pardon of violent criminals and not have it come back to haunt him.

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Watch: Ex-Capitol cop Fanone describes drive-by attack on his mother by a Trump supporter

Appearing on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" the day after Donald Trump issued a blanket pardon to the approximately 1500 rioters who stormed the Capitol and beat on law enforcement officers, former Metropolitan Police Department cop Michael Fanone described the threat he is now under as well as related attacks on his mother from the president's supporters.

Speaking with co-hosts Mika Brzezinski and Willie Geist, Fanone, who suffered a heart attack after being dragged through the treasonous crowd and tasered on his neck, name-checked the specific offenders who almost killed him, noting one who pulled him into the mob while shouting, "I got one!"

Asked what the future hold for him, he replied, "My family is less safe; we've suffered threats and acts of violence almost immediately after my Congressional testimony in the select committee [Jan 6] hearing. In fact, I didn’t even make it through my testimony before I received the first threatening phone call."

ALSO READ: Fox News has blood on its hands as Trump twists the knife

"My mother has been the victim of swatting incidents," continued. "She's had bricks thrown at her home in the middle of the night and recently, while she was raking the leaves in her front yard, she had an individual pull up in a truck and throw a bag of s--- on her."

"Because of these pardons, my family is threatened and my family is less safe. I fully expect to experience violence at the hands of some of these individuals, whether it’s the ones that directly assaulted me or others who see me as a spokesperson for accountability," he confessed.

Watch below or at the link.

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'Tells us a lot': MSNBC hosts pounce on John Thune for 'revealing' answer to reporter

Any question over how Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) will assert his independence from Donald Trump was put to rest on Tuesday when he fled into an elevator to avoid questions about the president's pardon of violent Jan. 6 criminals and offered a glib final response.

That was the opinion of members of an MSNBC panel on Wednesday morning, with two commentators calling his final answer "revealing."

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New details emerge about defining Trump order: 'Last-minute, rip-the-bandage-off decision'

New details have emerged about Donald Trump's decision to issue sweeping pardons to all of the Jan. 6 rioters, which so far has been the defining action of his first week back in office.

White House advisers familiar with the the Trump team's discussions told Axios that the president's Day One executive order to pardon all 1,500 of the criminals and defendants was a "last-minute, rip-the-bandage-off decision to try to move past the issue quickly," in the words of correspondent Marc Caputo.

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Prince Harry settles lawsuit against Murdoch's UK tabloids

Prince Harry settled on Wednesday a hotly-disputed lawsuit against Rupert Murdoch's UK tabloid publisher, which apologised for hacking the British royal's phone and agreed to pay him "substantial damages".

Murdoch's News Group Newspapers (NGN) also apologized for the impact on him of the "serious intrusion" into the private life of his late mother Diana, Princess of Wales, "in particular during his younger years".

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'Long four years': Conservative admits Trump just showed how he will 'exhaust Americans'

Donald Trump's feud with a clergywoman who criticized him to his face is just the first of many disputes that will "exhaust Americans," according to a conservative commentator.

The Right Rev. Mariann Budde, the Episcopal bishop of Washington, begged for mercy over communities who would likely be impacted by Trump's policies, such as immigrants and LGBTQ people, and the president lashed out at her afterward in a late-night Truth Social post, saying she was "nasty in tone, and not compelling or smart," and Republican pollster Kristen Soltis Anderson urged him to pace himself.

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Migrants at Texas border in shock after Trump canceled their asylum appointments

"Migrants at Texas border in shock after Trump canceled their asylum appointments" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

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'It's against law and order': Trump voters recoil from 'horrifying' Jan 6 pardons

Donald Trump's decision to issue a blanket pardon to all of the Jan. 6 rioters is not sitting well with some voters who handed him the keys to the Oval Office for a second time.

Following his swearing in, Axios is reporting that the president told his aides, "F--- it, release 'em all," thereby freeing everyone including what the conservative Wall Street Journal has labeled "cop beaters."

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'Who's he working for?' Congressman slams Trump's first days in office

A Democratic lawmaker shredded Donald Trump's claims that he is a "friend to police more than any president that's ever been in this office."

The president was asked whether his sweeping pardons of Jan. 6 rioters – including individuals convicted of violently assaulting police officers – sent a message that undermines law and order, and Rep. Jake Auchincloss (D-MA) dismantled Trump's denials and insisted that Republicans should take accountability for the party's undisputed leader's actions.

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