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'Political albatross': CNN data guru dubs Kristi Noem serious political problem for Trump

Dramatic new polling results have revealed that Americans want Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem fired and a majority oppose ICE's actions, according to CNN's data guru Thursday.

CNN chief data analyst Harry Enten described the attitude among voters towards ICE's harsh immigration tactics and specifically the high dissatisfaction against the Trump administration, namely Noem, who has led and carried out Trump's harsh immigration policies — and now 58% of Americans want her out of the job.

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Crack in Trump's strategy could bring his whole midterm term plot crashing down: expert

New York Times columnist David French recently outlined a strategy that could prevent President Donald Trump from undermining the midterm elections.

In recent columns, French has sounded the alarm about "all of Trump's threats against American elections."

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Trump roasts Mike Johnson for saying grace at prayer event: 'Excuse me, it's lunch!'

President Donald Trump in a speech at this year's National Prayer Breakfast roasted House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) for saying grace at meals.

The 79-year-old president spoke Thursday morning at the bipartisan gathering of U.S. and international political leaders, including El Salvador President Nayib Bukele, and he drifted from topic to topic in seemingly unscripted remarks that highlighted what he saw as contributions to religious life since returning to office.

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Top Trump nemesis goes directly after James Comer: 'You want this fight — let's have it'

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton dared House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-KY) to hold her and former President Bill Clinton's testimony on sex offender Jeffrey Epstein in public.

After the couple requested that the hearing be public, Comer announced that he would hold depositions behind closed doors in late February.

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Watch: Pro wrestling audience erupts in furious vulgar anti-ICE chant before match

Spectators of the AEW Dynamite wrestling match in Las Vegas this week started up a furious chant against Immigration and Customs Enforcement before the main event began.

On the TBS broadcast, the crowd could clearly be heard chanting "F--- ICE! F--- ICE!" for a period of several seconds.

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DOJ unit that probes law enforcement misdeeds dwindles away during ICE crackdown: report

The U.S. Justice Department unit tasked with prosecuting misconduct by law enforcement officers has dwindled away dramatically and has been ordered to scale back investigations of excessive force during the immigration crackdown in Minnesota, reporting suggests.
The Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division has lost two-thirds of its prosecutors, dropping from around 40 before President Donald Trump returned to office last year to no more than 13 now, three sources told Reuters.
Just two supervisors remain and have not announced plans to leave, but there had previously been around seven supervisors in the unit, and former DOJ lawyers told the news organization they doubted the section would be able to thoroughly investigate the fatal shootings or Renee Good and Alex Pretti last month by federal officers.
Section supervisors had been told early in Trump's second term that investigations of law enforcement officers would go forward only in egregious cases, such as deaths in custody or sexual assault, three former DOJ lawyers said, adding that state and local departments would typically take the lead.
“We evaluate each matter based on the merits without prejudice," said a Justice Department spokesperson, Natalie Baldassarre. "Nothing within our statutory purview is off limits."
Baldassarre did not dispute that law enforcement probes had been scaled back, but she said the section would hire additional prosecutors and said more than 25 lawyers, including advisers and supervisors, remained on staff.
The number of people charged with violating the civil rights law most commonly used in excessive force cases dropped about 36 percent last year, according to a Reuters analysis, to just 54 cases, the lowest since 2020.

“The idea of a system where every vulnerable group is not protected equally by the rule of law is not a system I can be a part of from the inside,” said Laura-Kate Bernstein, a former trial attorney who left the Justice Department in May.

Trump 'fears losing power' and is now 'more dangerous' because of it: analysis

Donald Trump's grip on power could be slipping and that makes him much more dangerous, according to a political analyst.

The president has thrown his weight around when it comes to Greenland, Venezuela, and recently suggested the Republican Party should assume control of election cycles in 15 states. This, among other reasons, makes it a troubling development according to Salon writer Chauncey DeVega.

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Trump makes startling admission about his 'big ego' at National Prayer Breakfast

President Donald Trump said at the National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday that he needed to win a second term because he was still burning with resentment over not getting one in 2020 — bragging about his "big ego" while continuing to push conspiracy theories about his prior election loss.

"They rigged the second election," said Trump. "I had to win it. I had to win it. I needed it for my own ego. I would've had a bad ego for the rest of my life. Now I really have a big ego. Beating these lunatics was incredible, what a great feeling. Winning every swing state. Winning the popular vote. The first time they said I didn't win the popular vote. I did."

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Trump stupefies with interview reply: 'Everyone in that room should've died from laughter'

President Donald Trump drew incredulous jeers with his response to a question about a potential Republican loss in this fall's midterm elections.

"NBC Nightly News" anchor Tom Llamas scored a sit-down interview with the 79-year-old president, and he asked if he would trust the results if the GOP lost their congressional majorities in November, and Trump demurred.

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Dem leader reveals his comment that made MAGA go 'nuts': 'They know it's true'

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) laid down on MS NOW Thursday why he opposes a proposed Republican bill that would put draconian new restrictions on voting, including a requirement to produce proof-of-citizenship documents to register to vote — something that goes drastically beyond even most GOP-controlled state's voter ID laws, and could prevent some 21 million eligible people from voting, including married women with name changes.

Schumer noted that his defiance, and the particular language he used to shoot down the bill, has infuriated MAGA activists — and he refuses to apologize for it.

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'It's bad': Tulsi Gabbard's 'nonsensical' move sets off alarms among intel experts

President Donald Trump's spy chief Tulsi Gabbard has set off alarms among former intelligence officials and election law experts by attending an FBI raid of an election facility in Georgia.

The director of national intelligence and the White House confirmed the president had dispatched her to Atlanta for the search, but intel veterans and legal experts questioned her authority to take part in the raid and erased the barrier between foreign and domestic intelligence activities set up after Watergate, reported CNN.

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Expert shreds Trump's 'laughable' $18 trillion boast: 'Can't find it anywhere in the data'

President Donald Trump and his allies continue to push a claim that he secured $18 trillion in foreign investment into the United States — but MS NOW analyst Steve Rattner brought down the reality hammer on Thursday's edition of "Morning Joe."

"So the president loves that $18 trillion figure, Steve," said anchor Willie Geist. "But as you point out, even the White House says it's half of that."

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GOP lawmakers secretly predict a huge 'blue wave' in midterms: 'We're on the defense'

GOP lawmakers believe a blue wave is on the way but what they do not know yet is how high the wave will be.

Speaking anonymously, a collection of Republican Party members believe they are set for a rough time in the midterms, irrespective of voter turnout. History has shown the party in opposition can make major gains against the party in power, as was the case for the Senate majority flip to Democrats in 2006.

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