Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Latest Headlines

Trump says Iran war will continue until nation gives its 'unconditional surrender'

Early Friday morning Donald Trump set aside the turmoil he created by firing DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and the release of a new damning Jeffrey Epstein files on Thursday to menace Iran with a demand for “unconditional surrender!”

On Truth Social, the president is now using ‘MIGA,” (Make Iran Great Again) as he directed the US military to ramp up military assaults, leaving death and rubble behind.

Keep reading... Show less

GOP 'anxiety' escalates over White House's 'unserious' Iran moves: analysis

A lack of a clear excuse or explanation from the White House on the Iran war has stirred anxiety within the Republican Party, an analyst has claimed.

Some members of the GOP, now gearing up for the midterms, find themselves taking a stance against the war with Iran, and therefore Donald Trump and his administration. Some Republican representatives previously aired their difficulty in being anti-War and pro-Trump, but for the bulk of the party, it seems looming elections are a cause for concern.

Keep reading... Show less

'Another knot for Trump' as new polling shows 'peril' for president: report

Americans have serious doubts about President Donald Trump's war against Iran, according to the latest polling.

The 79-year-old president's decision to join Israel in a military campaign against the Middle Eastern power lacks public support less than a week into what his administration calls Operation Epic Fury, reported The Hill.

Keep reading... Show less

Jim Jordan signs off on criminal referral for key Jan. 6 witness against Trump

House Republicans have formally asked for criminal charges against a key witness against President Donald Trump in the congressional Jan. 6 probe.

Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-GA) made a criminal referral of former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson to the Department of Justice accusing her of lying to Congress when she testified that Trump was aware of the potential of violence on Jan. 6, 2021, after summoning his supporters to Washington, D.C., and continued riling them up with claims of election fraud, sources told CNN.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump just plunged world into 'worst-case scenario': Nobel Prize-winning economist

The war in Iran is the worst-case scenario for the entire world, according to a Nobel Prize winner, highlighting a worrying economic development.

Paul Krugman believes the strikes carried out by Donald Trump's administration on the Middle Eastern country will have consequences the world over. Not only will the bombing, which has killed 500 civilians as well as Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, strain relations with the West and Middle East, but the rising energy price is looming and may cause real trouble in the long-term.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump accused of violent sexual assault in bombshell missing Epstein file interview

“Let me teach you how little girls are supposed to be.”

According to an interview with a woman conducted by the FBI as part of an investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, those were some of the first words Donald Trump directed at her before he began a sexual assault that ended with Trump reportedly hitting her and pulling her hair.

Keep reading... Show less

GOP fracture emerges as Trump accused of fumbling funding bill: 'Not a winning strategy'

A potential funding request for Donald Trump's war in Iran could splinter the Republican Party further on an already divisive issue.

Representatives for the party remain divided on whether a funding request would successfully pass through the House should it be formally put forward. Insiders believe as much as $50 billion could be asked of by the Pentagon and the president's team to push on with the war in Iran. Some hardline Republican representatives would have a hard time passing such a bill, while others believe the alleged GDP growth Trump has overseen in the last year means he has the right to request extra military funding.

Keep reading... Show less

One 'sickening' moment should have been the end of Noem's DHS tenure: ex-DOJ prosecutor

An ex-attorney appointed by former President Barack Obama says Kristi Noem should have been fired long before now, and one moment was enough to give her the boot.

The Department of Homeland Security head came under fire in recent weeks after a Congressional hearing where she refused to apologize for the rhetoric surrounding the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti. The two civilians were killed by ICE agents in January, leading to widespread denouncements of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement team.

Keep reading... Show less

Fired Noem targeted for criminal investigation tied to 'corruption in the administration'

Kristi Noem's tumultuous tenure as Department of Homeland Security Secretary ended Thursday when Donald Trump unceremoniously and abruptly fired her—but her troubles are just beginning.

Hours after Trump announced Noem's dismissal on Truth Social, making her the first major Cabinet casualty of his second term, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), a former federal prosecutor, announced he would pursue a criminal investigation into whether she committed perjury.

According to the New York Times, Blumenthal is calling for the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations to examine whether Noem lied under oath during a Tuesday Senate hearing. She testified that Corey Lewandowski, her top "adviser," did not approve Department of Homeland Security contracts.

Blumenthal told reporters: "Her firing doesn't absolve her or relieve her of potential liability for perjury, and we are going to pursue an investigation of the evidence that she lied, because it relates to corruption in the administration."

Lewandowski, a longtime Trump ally serving as a "special government employee," had become a significant and controversial figure inside DHS as Noem's senior adviser.

During the Senate hearing, Blumenthal directly confronted Noem. "Does Corey Lewandowski have a role in approving contracts, and if so, what is that role?" he asked.

"His role is as a special government employee, and special government employees work for the White House and the administration," Noem responded.

"So, he does have a role," Blumenthal pressed. "No," Noem replied.

The next day, Blumenthal sent Noem a letter accusing her of misrepresenting Lewandowski's actual role. "Evidence suggests that your testimony was false," he wrote, noting that department records showed Lewandowski had "personally approved contracts" and that employees considered his signature a "green light" for spending.

Blumenthal warned of the legal consequences: "The law requires and Congress expects witnesses to provide complete and truthful testimony. There are criminal penalties for knowingly and willfully making materially false statements or representations to Congress."

You can read more here.

DHS insiders pinpoint real reason Kristi Noem was fired: 'No way Trump lets her stay'

Kristi Noem's time at the Department of Homeland Security is up, and insiders believe her comments about another administration figure sealed her fate.

Donald Trump confirmed Noem would be moved from her position at the DHS at the end of the month. Noem, who was made DHS head on January 25 last year, will be replaced by MAGA-friendly Senator Markwayne Mullin. But insiders at the DHS believe Noem's sacking is of her own making, and it is not due to her comments at a recent Congressional hearing on the deaths of Alex Pretti and Renee Good.

Keep reading... Show less

'Whining' Republicans secretly trash Trump's Iran war behind his back: lawmaker

WASHINGTON — Republicans are happy to criticize President Donald Trump’s war on Iran behind closed doors but “willing to give up congressional power” when given chances to actually rein him in, a prominent Democrat charged, shortly before the House of Representatives rejected a bipartisan attempt to assert its constitutional powers.

“There is an incredible sense in the Congress in the last year that so many Republicans have been willing to give up congressional power,” Rep. Becca Balint (D-VT) told Raw Story at the Capitol.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump has imposed 'limitless' power since Supreme Court smackdown: report

President Donald Trump responded to last month's smackdown by the U.S. Supreme Court by imposing his will over every bastion of American power, according to new reporting.

After the court's right-wing struck down his tariff regime 6-3, the 79-year-old president has sidestepped Congress and smashed norms in a 14-day effort to reshape the global order, reported Axios.

Keep reading... Show less

'The grassroots is apoplectic' with Trump's betrayal of the MAGA base in Texas: WaPo

Donald Trump's reported decision to back incumbent Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) over far-right Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in the upcoming runoff has left his MAGA base "befuddled" and furious, with grassroots supporters making their displeasure loudly known.

According to the Washington Post, Trump acknowledges both candidates carry liabilities but believes Cornyn's baggage is substantially lighter than Paxton's, who faced an acrimonious divorce, corruption allegations and an attempted impeachment.

Yet Paxton's uncompromising far-right positions hold far greater appeal to Trump's base, who view Cornyn as a Republican in Name Only (RINO) and resent his occasional criticism of Trump—an unforgivable transgression among MAGA loyalists.

While Trump can overlook Cornyn's occasional departures from his policies, many of his supporters are far less forgiving.

When word of Trump's endorsement intentions spread Wednesday, MAGA activists flooded social media with reminders of Cornyn's opposition to Trump's 2020 election overturn efforts and his 2023 comments suggesting Republicans should move past Trump.

Stephen K. Bannon, a former top Trump adviser broadcasting his "War Room" podcast from Texas for the past five weeks in support of Paxton, captured the sentiment: "This is why the grassroots is apoplectic. They hate Cornyn. They don't hate him because he's a 'RINO,' they don't hate him because of his record. They don't like him because of that, but they hate him because he has hated on Trump."

Mark Davis, a conservative Texas radio host closely attuned to Trump-supporting Republican activists, described the impossible position: "It is a massive ask for the president, love him though we may, to come in and say, 'Hey, that conservative that you love for the same reasons you love me? I want you to change your mind'" and not vote for Paxton.

Raheem Kassam, editor of the conservative National Pulse and MAGA-aligned political operative, observed that the backlash is morphing into something more troubling: "More than anger, it's creating apathy," referring to activists frustrated by Trump's support for Cornyn.

You can read more here.