Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Latest Headlines

Fatal flaw exposed in GOP scheme to ram through voting restrictions: analyst

With no path forward to pass President Donald Trump's pet voting rights restriction bill, the SAVE America Act, through the Senate, some House GOP officials are devising an alternative strategy to pass some provisions that wouldn't be subject to a Democratic filibuster — but Beltway analysts are already warning this strategy has a massive flaw that could quickly derail it.

According to Rachel Schilke of the Washington Examiner, "House Administration Committee is circulating 5 reconciliation proposals, such as voter ID and funds to require proof of citizenship; Reconciliation 2.0 is a long shot but leaders remain optimistic about passing something before the midterms."

Keep reading... Show less

Big-name conservative loses confidence in Trump’s war effort

President Donald Trump’s war against Iran appears to be bleeding support, with one prominent conservative media figure saying on Monday that it had become “apparent” the administration could not achieve its stated goals in the conflict.

“It is becoming apparent to the Trump administration that they are not going to be able to change the regime, unless you throw 10,000 ground troops into Iran, which is never going to happen,” political commentator Bill O’Reilly told NewsNation in comments flagged Tuesday by The Hill.

Keep reading... Show less

MAGA loses it as GOP gov appoints senator who donated to Trump foe: 'This should end him!'

MAGA fans were outraged after the controversial replacement for Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) was announced on Tuesday.

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt appointed oil and gas executive Alan Armstrong, who had formerly made a $5,800 donation to one of President Donald Trump's enemies, former Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL). Kinzinger had voted to impeach Trump, and the donation came around that time.

Keep reading... Show less

DHS claims ICE has even 'more reason' to wear masks — after being uncovered at airports

Border czar Tom Homan struggled to explain why Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents had "more reason" to wear masks after spending several days with their faces uncovered at the nation's airports.

Just days after President Donald Trump deployed ICE to "help" TSA agents during the partial government shutdown, Homan insisted they needed the masks more than ever because of criticism from Democratic lawmakers.

Keep reading... Show less

'Sham': ​Ted Cruz torched for blocking Jack Smith at 2020 election hearing

Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) accused Sen. Ted Cruz of holding a "sham" hearing on an investigation into President Donald Trump's 2020 election crimes because he blocked the testimony of the primary investigator, special counsel Jack Smith.

At a judiciary subcommittee hearing on Tuesday, Durbin recalled Trump's plot to stay in power after he lost the 2020 election, followed by the former president taking classified documents to his Mar-a-Lago home.

Keep reading... Show less

Ugly truth underpins latest polls of MAGA's support for Trump despite schism: analysis

Much has been made of a schism in the MAGA movement created by President Donald Trump's war in Iran, but one analyst doesn't see signs of that happening at mass scale.

Some high-profile Trump allies have spoken out against the war as out of step with his campaign promises, but Washington Post columnist Jim Geraghty pointed to polls showing that MAGA's rank-and-file are on board with his decision to join Israel in a military operation against Iran.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump breaks military recruitment vows as he arrests and deports veterans

The Trump administration has initiated deportation proceedings against 34 former military members over the past year and arrested 125 others for immigration violations, representing a dramatic reversal of previous policies that shielded service members and their families from enforcement action.

Federal data obtained by The New York Times reveals that immigration authorities also placed 248 relatives of former military members into deportation proceedings after the Trump administration rescinded Biden-era guidance giving service members preferential treatment in immigration enforcement decisions.

Keep reading... Show less

Stephen Miller hit with 'uncomfortable silence' as he jabs Republicans with loyalty test

Stephen Miller encouraged Texas Republican state legislators to challenge a decades-old U.S. Supreme Court precedent

The White House deputy chief of staff views GOP-led state legislatures as a workaround to get anti-immigration laws on the books that wouldn't need to pass through the gridlock in Congress, especially as Republicans at this point appear likely to lose their House majority and possibly the Senate, reported the New York Times.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump Cabinet members are handing millions in cash gifts to the president: report

President Donald Trump has received millions in donations from his Cabinet members — except for three people, according to a new report Tuesday.

The Swamp, The Daily Beast's Substack, reported that out of Trump's 23 Cabinet members, 20 have offered substantial financial gifts to the president.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge hurls Trump admin's own words at him as she refuses to kill DOGE lawsuit

A federal judge has rejected the Trump administration's attempt to dismiss a lawsuit challenging Elon Musk's authority to exercise executive power as head of the Department of Government Efficiency.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan used President Donald Trump's own words against him when she denied the government's motion to dismiss on Monday, ruling that more than a dozen state attorneys general and several nonprofits have sufficient evidence to pursue claims that Musk illegally wielded power without Senate confirmation, reported The Daily Beast.

Keep reading... Show less

Delta Airlines scraps VIP flying perks for Congress members due to TSA stalemate

Republican lawmakers now have a powerful personal incentive to strike a deal with Democrats and restore funding to pay TSA employees — Delta Airlines has suspended the VIP perks that allow members of Congress to skip security lines.

With a two-week congressional recess looming, the Atlanta-based carrier announced it would temporarily halt all special services for lawmakers flying Delta, blaming the cascade of problems created by the ongoing partial government shutdown.

"Due to the impact on resources from the longstanding government shutdown, Delta will temporarily suspend specialty services to members of Congress flying Delta. Next to safety, Delta's no. 1 priority is taking care of our people and customers, which has become increasingly difficult in the current environment," the airline said in a statement.

Delta — like most major U.S. carriers — routinely provides special treatment for lawmakers who frequently shuttle between Washington and their home districts while simultaneously overseeing the nation's aviation system.

The suspension is comprehensive. Members of Congress will lose airport escorts, priority seat upgrades, rebooking assistance, and other VIP treatment. The only concession — lawmakers will retain access to a dedicated phone line for making reservations.

The move comes as the aviation system buckles under the strain of the shutdown's consequences. Travelers have faced hours-long security screening delays as Transportation Security Administration employees continue to work without paychecks — a situation that began in mid-February when Congress failed to fund the Department of Homeland Security amid disputes over immigration enforcement.

The staffing crisis has worsened dramatically, with TSA resignations climbing as underpaid workers abandon their posts. President Donald Trump has attempted to offset the crisis by deploying immigration agents to more than a dozen airports to assist with crowd control — a move that has drawn sharp criticism from TSA workers who argue the agents lack proper training for security operations.

'Stop being snarky!' Republican Marsha Blackburn snaps at ex-FBI special agent

Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) snapped at former FBI special agent Christopher O'Leary after he testified that Director Kash Patel had damaged the bureau with political purges.

During a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing on Tuesday, senators spoke to three witnesses about the DOJ's Arctic Frost investigation into President Donald Trump's alleged election crimes and the mishandling of classified documents.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump blurts out 'striking admission' on Iran — and signals big problem: report

Donald Trump's improvised comments about Iran while boarding Air Force One on Monday demonstrated his chaotic approach to military strategy — and his apparent blindness to critical consequences unfolding around him, according to a report.

The president made a comment revealing that Iran's regional retaliation caught planners of the military action against the country off guard.

"Look at the way Iran attacked unexpectedly all of those countries surrounding them. That was not supposed to-- nobody was even thinking about it," the president conceded before reasserting without substantiation, "But they wanted to take over the Middle East."

The remarks prompted analysis from New Republic correspondent Greg Sargent and Matt Duss, executive vice president at the Center for International Policy.

Sargent highlighted the troubling implications on his podcast. "He said no one anticipated that Iran would attack other countries in an effort to widen the war," he commented. "But in saying that, Trump revealed that he didn't anticipate it — which is a striking admission about his own lack of foresight."

He continued, "We think this captures something broader. On one front after another, Trump plainly didn't prepare for eventualities that most experts fully did anticipate. So how directly responsible are these failings for what we're seeing right now — that by most indications, the war is getting worse for Trump and the U.S. on many fronts?"

Duss responded, "Well, we know that this is going much worse than Donald Trump himself thought it would. We know that Donald Trump does not do the reading. We know that Donald Trump has the attention span of a fly. We know that he just makes stuff up all the time. Trump made this threat over the weekend to bomb power plants — which is clearly a war crime, to attack plants that produce power for civilians. And then I think he woke up and saw that the stock market is in trouble, oil prices are continuing to go higher."

Duss dismissed Trump's characterization that the attacks blindsided everyone as fundamentally dishonest.

"Everyone anticipated this," he stated flatly. "Every one of these countries that Iran has attacked — we should have expected it, whether it's Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, obviously Israel. This is part of Iran's defensive strategy. This is part of how they believe they were creating deterrence."

He went on, "So Iran is following through — they have to follow through, in a sense, if they want to make sure that this doesn't happen again in the future. So yes, to answer your question, of course, people knew Iran was going to do this. Again, Donald Trump does not bother to do the reading."