Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Latest Headlines

The U.S. 'Presidents Club' convenes to honor Carter

It is the world's most exclusive society and meetings are limited to infrequent state occasions, but the so-called American Presidents Club was in session Thursday to see off departed comrade Jimmy Carter.

The five living men who have occupied the White House -- Joe Biden and his predecessors Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump -- came together at Washington's National Cathedral for their first encounter since the 2018 funeral of another former president, George H.W. Bush.

Keep reading... Show less

Watch: Arsonists caught on camera setting fires in 'non-burning' areas of Los Angeles

A group of arsonists were seen setting fires in non-burning areas of Los Angeles as wildfires ravaged nearby regions.

Neuroscientist and podcaster Andrew D. Huberman shared a video on Thursday of men allegedly setting fires in urban areas.

Keep reading... Show less

'Hell no!': Republican senators unwilling to follow Trump's order to end debt ceiling

WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump told NBC News in a recent interview that the “smartest thing” Republicans could do is to eliminate the debt ceiling altogether.

“The Democrats have said they want to get rid of it. If they want to get rid of it, I would lead the charge,” Trump said.

Keep reading... Show less

‘All eyes on SCOTUS’ after Trump loses sentencing bid at top NY court

The clock is running out on Donald Trump’s efforts in the New York judicial system to delay criminal sentencing, as a judge in the state’s highest court rejected his motion Thursday morning. Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts of business fraud stemming from his “hush money” case. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg declared the convictions were for "falsifying New York business records in order to conceal his illegal scheme to corrupt the 2016 election.

Trump's last hope appears to be for the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene, a request he made Wednesday. Some experts have suggested the Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction in the case—an argument Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is now making.

Keep reading... Show less

'Out of control': Cancer surgeon claims UnitedHealthcare questioned her mid-procedure

A breast cancer surgeon had to "scrub out mid-surgery" to call a UnitedHealthcare representative because the insurance giant questioned whether the procedure she was in the middle of performing was really necessary.

Dr. Elisabeth Potter posted her story to Instagram this week, and the post has gotten more than 221,000 likes.

Keep reading... Show less

Major unions merge to 'unleash a new era of worker power' as Trump 2.0 looms

The 2-million-member-strong Service Employees International Union announced Wednesday that it is joining the AFL-CIO, bolstering the ranks of the largest labor federation in the United States as unions prepare to fight the incoming Trump administration.

"CEOs and billionaires want nothing more than to see workers divided, but we're standing here today with greater solidarity than ever to reach the 60 million Americans who say they'd join a union tomorrow if the laws allowed and to unrig our labor laws to guarantee every worker in America the basic right to organize on the job," AFL-CIO president Liz Shuler said in a statement.

Keep reading... Show less

Musk draws ire because he 'isn't left-wing': Italy's Meloni

Italy's far-right prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, said on Thursday Elon Musk's political interventions only caused outrage because he wasn't left-wing -- and that foreigners had been interfering in Italian politics for years.

Meloni, head of the post-Fascist Brothers of Italy party, said Musk was exercising his right to free speech. Instead, she accused powerful people on the left of political interference, including billionaire financier and philanthropist George Soros.

Keep reading... Show less

Canada prepares to drop the hammer on Trump's home state amid tariff threats

The Canadian government isn't taking President-elect Donald Trump's tariff threats lying down and is planning to take retaliatory measures that will hit his home state of Florida.

CTV News is reporting that the Canadian government is planning a series of retaliatory tariffs that would hit American-made orange juice, which is a major export of Florida.

Keep reading... Show less

'I will not consent!' GOP accused of rushing through confirmation of Doug Burgum

WASHINGTON — U.S. Senate Democrats raised concerns Wednesday that Republicans have scheduled a hearing for one of President-elect Donald Trump’s nominees before he completed the necessary paperwork and an FBI background check.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer and Energy and Natural Resources Committee ranking member Martin Heinrich separately criticized the decision, saying it sets a troubling precedent.

Keep reading... Show less

Watch: George W. Bush declines to shake Donald Trump's hand at Jimmy Carter's funeral

Former President George W. Bush declined to shake the hand of President-elect Donald Trump at former President Jimmy Carter's funeral.

As the former presidents were seated at the Washington National Cathedral on Thursday, a CBS panel noted that Bush snubbed the president-elect.

Keep reading... Show less

'Doing the worst of all worlds': Facebook whistleblower takes new shot at Zuckerberg

The woman who provided Congress with reams of documentation in 2021showing Facebook (now Meta) was more interested in profits over user safety, took some potshots at founder Mark Zuckerberg in a new interview published on Thursday.

Speaking with the Guardian's Dan Milmo and Robert Booth, Frances Haugen admitted she was unsurprised that Zuckerberg decided to pull the plug on mandating fact-checking on the social media platform that likely pleased Donald Trump.

According to Haugen, the Meta chairman saw which way the wind was blowing with Trump winning re-election in 2024 and made his new policy announcement earlier this week to get on the president-elect's good side.

Also read: 'Bring it on': Defiant Raskin responds to GOP threats of retaliation for J6 investigation

"The announcement from Mark is him basically saying: ‘Hey I heard the message, we will not intervene in the United States,’” Haugen told the Guardian while stating, "What Trump wants is for Facebook to step back and not intervene, because Maga knows how to rile up social media. And so it’s not just about content; it’s about behaviour, too."

According to the whistleblower, lack of moderation and fact-checking are not the only problems, with the Guardian report stating she said the social media giant should "... focus more on adjusting the algorithms that served content to users and being transparent about how those algorithms worked."

"They’re kind of doing the worst of all worlds. They’re not doing any of those actual holistic changes, and they’re cutting what little safety systems they did have,” she lamented.

You can read more here.

'There's no easy button here': Ex-Trump official pours cold water on disruption plans

According to a former official in Donald Trump's first administration, a plan by the president-elect to purge thousands of civil servants in a supposed effort trim down the cost of government is easier said than done.

In an interview with Anna Kramer of NOTUS, the former director of the first Trump administration’s Federal Salary Council took aim at plans by the incoming administration to follow through on proposals from what is known as "Schedule F" which would allow employees to be made political appointees and thereby easier to fire.

According to Ronald Sanders, who stepped down in protest when the topic came up during Trump's first term, he sees little path for the initiative to be a success on multiple levels.

Also read: 'Bring it on': Defiant Raskin responds to GOP threats of retaliation for J6 investigation

“My conversation with White House led me to conclude that Schedule F was going to be used to put loyalists in place, and used not just to achieve policy alignment,” he stated, explaining why he walked away previously.

Now, with Trump getting a second bite at the apple, he sees little has changed.

"There’s no easy button here. There are limited ways to reduce large numbers, and they both have consequences,” he explained with Jenny Mattingley, a former White House and Office of Management and Budget staffer, agreeing.

“You are just expanding the number of political appointments out there. They tend to turn over, come and go every four years. That level of turnover makes it really hard to keep efficient or effective services going,” Mattingley observed before adding, "People are talking about reform at a very broad level and in a way that will have negative impacts on how the federal workforce can deliver for the public.”

Calling Schedule F nothing more than a "loyalty test," Jennifer Pahlka, a former Obama administration official, explained, "In order to have a healthy civil service that enables a government that can do what it says it’s going to do, you need to be able to hire the right people and fire the wrong ones. And we don’t actually have that today."

You can read more here.

DOJ accuses nation's largest landlords of scheme to rip-off tenants

The Department of Justice on Tuesday sued six of the nation’s largest landlords, accusing them of using a pricing algorithm to improperly work together to raise rents across the country.

The lawsuit expands an antitrust complaint the department filed in August that accused property management software-maker RealPage of engaging in illegal price-fixing to reduce competition among landlords so prices — and profits — would soar. Officials conducted a two-year investigation into the scheme following a 2022 ProPublica story that showed how RealPage was helping landlords set rents across the country in a way that legal experts said could result in cartel-like behavior.

Keep reading... Show less