Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Latest Headlines

Federal employee union sues Trump over Musk's DOGE

The largest union of US federal government employees filed suit on Monday against President Donald Trump over his plans to create a cost-cutting "Department of Government Efficiency" headed by billionaire Elon Musk.

The suit was filed in a district court in Washington by the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) and non-profit Public Citizen just minutes after Trump was sworn in as the 47th US president.

Keep reading... Show less

'More evidence of their intent': Senator slams Trump's day one move as 'designed chaos'

In less than 24 hours, the CBP One app, which the Customs and Border Protection used for appointments for asylum-seekers applying for entry into the United States, was shut down. According to one senator, chaos is the goal.

According to a video posted by Washington Post Texas correspondent Arelis R. Hernández, those who had appointments at 12:20 p.m. were told, "Those appointments are no longer valid." The mobile app was also shut down.

Keep reading... Show less

‘Absolutely vile’: Elon Musk's inauguration salute draws Nazi comparisons on social media

Tech billionaire Elon Musk shook up social media after a speech he delivered to a cheering MAGA crowd at President Donald Trump’s inauguration rally Monday.

But it wasn’t the speech itself inside the Capitol One Arena that stunned political observers in the first hours of Trump’s new presidency – but the gesture he made at the conclusion that opened up a flood of reaction.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's inauguration - five takeaways

Donald Trump's inauguration had to be moved indoors Monday due to a particularly frigid wintry spell across much of the United States, causing significant changes to the event after years of tedious planning.

But the weather wasn't the only unusual aspect of the 47th president's swearing-in ceremony.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump seeks to rename Denali, highest peak in North America

US President Donald Trump announced in his inaugural speech Monday that he will seek to rename Alaska's Denali as part of his day one actions, overriding the will of the state's Indigenous population and its elected leaders.

The order, set to be published later in the day, will revert the name of North America's highest peak back to Mount McKinley.

Keep reading... Show less

'Blatantly unconstitutional': Law professor says key Trump executive orders won't survive

Trump's flurry of planned executive orders are rife with "dangerous and illegal abuses of power" that will not hold up under the slightest legal scrutiny, George Mason University law professor Ilya Somin wrote in a scathing analysis for the libertarian magazine Reason on Monday.

In particular, he argued, Trump's plans to go nuclear against immigration will face immediate legal challenges that even his own judges will struggle to defend under the Constitution.

Keep reading... Show less

Skipping hand on Bible, Trump declares: ‘We will not forget our God’ at inauguration

During his presidential swearing-in inaugural ceremony, Donald Trump several times invoked God, while inexplicably not placing his hand on either of the two Bibles Melania Trump held at his side.

“I was saved by God to make America great again,” Trump told the former presidents, lawmakers, and billionaires in attendance at the Capitol Rotunda. “We are one people, one family, and one glorious nation under God,” Trump also declared, adding, “We will not forget our God.”

Keep reading... Show less

Marjorie Taylor Greene: Dems want to 'line us up in front of a firing squad and kill us'

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) said she expects Democrats to impeach President Donald Trump again — and warned that members of the opposition party would "kill" Republicans with a firing squad if they could.

During an interview after Trump's inauguration on Monday, host Steve Bannon asked Greene about the possibility of a future impeachment.

Keep reading... Show less

‘I’m going in front!’ Marjorie Taylor Greene angrily cuts in line at Trump inauguration

An angry Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) said she cut to the front of the line at President Donald Trump's inauguration because seating should have been based on who supported him "most" instead of congressional seniority.

Greene explained her actions in an interview on Real America's Voice following Monday's inauguration.

Keep reading... Show less

Hillary Clinton can't stop herself from laughing at Trump during inauguration speech

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton couldn't help but laugh when Donald Trump said that he was signing an executive order to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.

Trump made the vow during his inaugural address inside the Capitol on Monday.

Keep reading... Show less

'Disrespected MAGA': Ex-senator thinks Trump snubbed his supporters at inauguration

Former U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) said that the one shocking thing she saw from President Donald Trump was just how "disrespectful" he was to his MAGA supporters who got him where he is.

She began by talking about being in Washington, D.C., and said that it wasn't all that cold, certainly not as cold as it had been at previous inaugurations, like the one in 2009.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump plans 'sweeping pardon' for MAGA rioters 'convicted of violent attacks' against cops

Now that he's back in the White House, President Donald Trump is reportedly turning his attention toward pardoning the violent criminal who ransacked the United States Capitol on his behalf four years ago.

ABC News' Katherine Faulders reports that Trump "is preparing to issue a sweeping series of pardons" for January 6th defendants "including commuting the prison sentences of hundreds of his supporters who have been convicted of violent attacks against law enforcement."

Keep reading... Show less

'Destroyed evidence!' Trump uncorks lie-filled rant about Jan. 6 probe after inauguration

Donald Trump celebrated his return to the presidency with a falsehood-filled rant about the Jan. 6 committee's investigation.

The newly inaugurated president gave a rambling speech at the U.S. Capitol – the site of the infamous riot that led to criminal charges for hundreds of his supporters and Trump himself – in which he pledged "action" on those defendants, and complained that Joe Biden had preemptively pardoned some of his enemies.

Keep reading... Show less