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'Trying to sell books': Ex-Biden aide faces bad reaction over ditching Dem party

Karine Jean-Pierre has left the Democratic Party after serving as former president Joe Biden's press secretary, she's revealing in her forthcoming book.

The longtime Democratic operative served two years as the top spokesperson for the White House, but she's urging voters to look past the two-party system in her new book, "Independent: A Look Inside a Broken White House, Outside the Party Lines," reported the Associated Press.

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Mike Lindell could face sanctions as trial judge orders him to stop interviews

U.S. District Court Judge Nina Y. Wang reportedly ordered MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell to stop all interviews and social media posts about his defamation trial.

Attorneys for former voting machine executive Eric Coomer notified Wang that Lindell had flouted the court's order against posting to social media from inside the federal courtroom.

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GOP takes 'talking point' from office that Republicans keep calling 'unreliable'

Republicans may soon be quoting the “totally unreliable” Congressional Budget Office (CBO), after new data shows President Donald Trump’s tariff policies could help to shrink US deficits.

The CBO released data on Wednesday claiming Trump’s tariffs will cut the US fiscal deficit by $2.8 trillion.

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MAGA destroys top job applicant who 'debased' himself to hide woke past: report

In a shocking turn of events, University of Michigan President Santa Ono's bid for the top job at the University of Florida went up in flames, thanks to Florida's far-right political machine. Ono, who resigned from his Michigan post in May to pursue the Florida position, found himself caught in the crosshairs of Governor Ron DeSantis' crusade to make Florida "where 'woke' goes to die."

According to a scathing report by Slate's Alex Kirshner, Ono's past support for diversity initiatives at Michigan became his Achilles' heel in the Sunshine State. Despite Ono's desperate attempts to distance himself from his own record — what Slate describes as a "face plant" — MAGA Republicans weren't buying it.

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Pro-Trump pastor hit by damning allegations of 'psychological abuse'

Evangelical singer/preacher Sean Feucht has been a prominent figure in the MAGA movement, preaching far-right Christian nationalist views and heading the nonprofits Sean Feucht Ministries and Light a Candle. Feucht, according to Rolling Stone, founded the group Pastors for Trump and said that "America should be governed according to biblical law for the benefit of believers as a way to prepare for the second coming of Christ."

Feucht has plenty of critics within Christianity, including Catholics and Mainline Protestants who oppose Christian nationalism and reject the idea that supporting President Donald Trump is a prerequisite for preaching the gospel. And now, according to Religion News Service (RNS) reporter Jack Jenkins, criticism of Feucht is also coming from evangelical former associates.

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'Elon Musk could tank Trump's entire agenda': President's ex-aide sounds warning

Tech billionaire Elon Musk went off on an X tangent, attacking President Donald Trump's 2026 budget, which he's referring to as a "big, beautiful bill." Musk said that the legislation still adds $2.4 trillion to the deficit, at a time when he sought to reduce it.

Musk claimed last year that he could cut $2 trillion from the federal budget to help reduce the deficit. Despite his best efforts, he was only able to cut $160 billion. Now he's blaming Trump and Republicans for making things worse.

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'Literally running the show': Shock report reveals full reach of Project 2025

Despite repeatedly attempting to distance himself from Project 2025 during his reelection campaign, U.S. President Donald Trump's administration employs dozens of senior officials with links to the Heritage Foundation-led plan to expand executive power and shrink the federal government—including a majority of his Cabinet.

That's according to an interactive analysis published Monday by the international climate-focused news outlet DeSmog, which found that more than 50 high-level Trump administration officials have ties to groups behind Project 2025.

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Mike Lindell's trial attorneys won't argue his vote-rigging claims are true

MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell's attorneys have declined to argue that his election-rigging claims are true at a defamation trial in Colorado this week.

According to a partial trial transcript provided by KUSA, defense attorney Chris Kachouroff told the jury on Tuesday that it was not necessary to prove Lindell's voting machine claims. Lindell, however, has promised his followers that he would use the trial to banish election computers.

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'Act of self-deception': Trump faces crisis as GOP rebels vow to dig in heels

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson need to back off — or so argue many Senate Republicans set on overhauling the House-passed One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which would turn much of Trump's campaign rhetoric into law.

After the measure squeaked out of the House by a single vote ahead of the Memorial Day recess, GOP leaders and the president are pressuring Senate Republicans to pass the bill, complete with tax and spending cuts, by July 4.

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'Not the wisest move': University's controversial choice is put under microscope

A student journalist’s Department of Government Efficiency-like questions landed him and two others at Brown University under investigation. According to a New York Times report, it’s showing the struggle universities are having, “protecting the rights of students to express themselves, after years of trying to adjudicate just when political expression tips into harassment.”

“Please describe your role,” sophomore Alex Shieh asked the staff at Brown. He also asked, “What tasks have you performed in the past week? How would Brown students be affected if your job didn’t exist?”

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'Silence is deafening': Insider flags Trump's lack of response to major critique

A veteran Florida reporter said he was bracing for president Donald Trump's inevitable response to Elon Musk's sharp criticism of his legislative priority.

The tech billionaire described Trump's sought-after "big beautiful bill" as a "disgusting abomination," saying it would explode the deficit, and Axios reporter Marc Caputo, who is well-sourced in Trumpworld, told "CNN News Central" that the president and Musk remain friends and allies, but their relationship has grown somewhat strained.

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'Chef's kiss': 'Pained' Mike Johnson mocked after confirming Musk 'ghosted' him

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) held a press conference on Capitol Hill Wednesday where he revealed that Elon Musk ignored his phone call to discuss Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill."

On Tuesday, just days after formally leaving his post as de facto leader of the Department of Government Efficiency, Musk posted on his social media platform X, "I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore. This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it."

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White House delayed report release to hide damaging deficit numbers: Politico

As the White House presses forward with urging Congress to pass a new budget bill over objections to how it will explode the deficit, the administration is being accused of withholding a report that could have damaged their efforts.

According to a report from Politico, the White House had been dragging its feet on a forecast that shows the deficit growing and what little they had doled out has contained redactions.

The report in question is designed to forecast agricultural trade and was dated May 29, but the White House sat on it until Monday.

The reason, reports Politico's Marcia Brown, was because the administration "disliked what it said about the deficit."

According to Brown's reporting, "Policymakers, farm groups and commodities traders rely on the closely watched report, which the Agriculture Department issues quarterly, for its analysis of imports and exports of major farm commodities including cotton and livestock. The highly unusual rollout could raise questions about potential political meddling with government reports that have traditionally been trusted for decades."

According to one observer, former USDA chief economist, Joe Glauber, "Objectivity is really key here and the public depends on it... To lose that trust would be terrible.”

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