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'This looks like Russia': MS NOW panel rips ICE agents after watching brutal arrest clips

After running a collection of video clips of Department of Homeland Security agents brutalizing and dragging away U.S. citizens in Minnesota since an ICE agent shot 37-year-old Renee Good in the face one week ago, a panel on MS NOW compared the U.S. under Donald Trump to police state Russia.

With viral videos showing ICE agents grabbing anyone they want off the streets proliferating, “Morning Joe” co-host Joe Scarborough kicked off the conversation and claimed this is not the America anyone wants, outside of DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and Trump advisor Stephen Miller.

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Trump starts morning with conspiracy-laden call for expulsion of Dem lawmaker from America

President Donald Trump started the morning with a call to expel Somalians from the country, including a smear against Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN), a Minnesota congresswoman who has become a target for his hatred in recent months.

Trump, posting on Truth Social, was reacting to a story from the far-right website Just The News, which claimed that federal officials are investigating some $130 million in cash transfers from Minneapolis to destinations overseas by Somali immigrants, through the airport in Columbus, Ohio.

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'Trigger-happy' ICE agents have 'overwhelmed' police across US: expert

ICE agents are overwhelming the police force in parts of the US, an expert has warned, as the agency begins "targeting anybody trying to help."

Lisa Erbes, a co-leader for the grassroots organization Indivisible Twin Cities, warned the Immigration and Customs Enforcement team are overstepping in parts of the country. Worries over what ICE will do in future were aired by political commentators following the death of Renee Good. The 37-year-old mother was shot and killed by an enforcement officer in Minneapolis earlier this month.

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'Contrary to everything you're taught': Expert stunned over DOJ move he has 'never' seen

CNN's Elie Honig questioned the series of decisions that led to the resignations of multiple high-ranking prosectors in the Department of Justice over an immigration agent's killing of a woman in MInneapolis.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche declared Tuesday "there is currently no basis for a criminal civil rights investigation" into the fatal shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer, which prompted the departures of at least five prosecutors in the DOJ's Civil Rights Division and five others in the Minnesota U.S. attorney's office.

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'They won't do that': Nobel Prize winner says GOP set to resist Trump on economic policy

The GOP will resist Donald Trump's call for a new economic policy on credit card use, a Nobel Prize winner has claimed.

Paul Krugman believes that, while the Republican Party is keen to appease the president, it would be a struggle to shift support to Trump's recent economic policy announcement. Trump called for a "one year cap on Credit Card Interest Rates at 10%" by January 20, and though the deadline is just a week away, it seems very unlikely this will pass into law.

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Trump's latest speech was 'Exhibit A' that he is 'struggling' personally: MS NOW host

Donald Trump's speech at a Ford auto factory in Detroit on Tuesday was panned on Wednesday morning as being demonstrative of why his administration’s approval ratings are in free fall, according to the panel on “Morning Joe.”

On Wednesday, the MS NOW co-hosts started with Trump’s altercation with a heckler at the plant that got an employee suspended after the president gave him the middle finger, before turning to the president’s claims that the economy is booming despite all evidence to the contrary.

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GOP lawmaker spills about unpredictable colleague Lindsey Graham: 'Vomit in the fish tank'

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) was lavished with praise by Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) in his latest book How to Test Negative for Stupid: And Why Washington Never Will, while at the same time, also described the senator from South Carolina as a hard-drinking wild card that at any moment could “get drunk and vomit in the fish tank.”

Published last October, Kennedy’s book has gone on to become a New York Times best seller, selling nearly 500,000 copies, and perhaps in part due to the wealth of insider anecdotes about both his Republican and Democratic colleagues.

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'What gives him the right?': Trump voters grill president on his threat to major ally

Donald Trump's voter base is starting to turn on him as his biggest supporters question his reasoning for a potential invasion of a foreign ally.

The president made it clear that he wanted to take the Kingdom of Denmark's territory of Greenland in a move that would allegedly bolster national security. Natural mineral deposits have also been cited as a reason for the Trump administration's interest by some political commentators.

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Trump is playing 'mutually assured destruction' in face-off with GOP lawmakers: report

Donald Trump is playing a game of chicken with three Republican senators seeking re-election in November, withholding endorsements while avoiding direct opposition to preserve Senate control, according to new reporting.

According to Politico reporters Sophia Cai and Alex Gangitano, Senators Susan Collins (R-ME), John Cornyn (R-TX), and Bill Cassidy (R-LA) will not receive presidential support in the near term due to their opposition to various White House initiatives. However, the situation remains fluid.

White House insiders describe a calculation of mutual benefit. As one official explained, "It's math and the fear of mutually assured destruction. The president doesn't end their careers and these senators don't end his congressional agenda."

Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with GOP lawmakers resisting his initiatives, yet White House officials acknowledge his dependence on these senators. With the Republican-controlled House expected to flip in November, Trump needs to preserve Senate Republican strength.

The White House is similarly taking a neutral stance in Georgia's Republican Senate primary. Representatives Buddy Carter and Mike Collins are competing against former college football coach Derek Dooley. The administration has not yet endorsed a candidate.

Politico reports that the White House is avoiding involvement partly because it cannot risk alienating either congressman. With Speaker Mike Johnson operating under razor-thin House margins, the administration cannot afford to lose either Carter or Collins's vote.

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'No more payments': Trump announces halt of federal funding to Dem-controlled cities

President Donald Trump made the stunning announcement Wednesday that he would halt all federal funding to what he called “sanctuary cities,” cities like New York City, New York, often criticized by Republicans for not adequately cooperating with federal immigration enforcement, and all controlled by Democratic leaders.

“EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY FIRST, NO MORE PAYMENTS WILL BE MADE BY THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT TO STATES FOR THEIR CORRUPT CRIMINAL PROTECTION CENTERS KNOWN AS SANCTUARY CITIES,” Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social.

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'Anything less is unacceptable': Trump hurls explicit demand for Greenland takeover

President Donald Trump demanded Wednesday that Greenland be put “in the hand of the United States” in a fiery social media post, declaring the the United States “needs” the arctic island for national security.

“The United States needs Greenland for the purpose of National Security. It is vital for the Golden Dome that we are building. NATO should be leading the way for us to get it. IF WE DON’T, RUSSIA OR CHINA WILL, AND THAT IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN!” Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social.

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Prosecutors 'stunned and angered' as Trump's 'slap in the face' erases years of their work

President Donald Trump has been destroying morale among federal prosecutors by undoing years of their work with the stroke of a pen.

The 79-year-old president pardoned some of the most high-profile public corruption and white-collar defendants who were prosecuted in recent years, including some brought to justice during his first term in office, and more than a dozen experienced prosecutors told the Washington Post that Trump's clemency acts have eroded faith in the Department of Justice that their work will lead to accountability.

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‘Somebody’s going to get hurt,' lawyer warns as Trump ‘secretary of retribution’ runs amok

In a video posted to his X account in late December, Ivan Raiklin is seen walking behind a senior federal prosecutor outside the federal courthouse in Washington, D.C. Peppering her with questions, the former Army Green Beret turned lawyer and self-styled Trump “secretary of retribution” accuses the official of “covering up for the fed-surrection.”

Since Donald Trump’s defeat in 2020, Raiklin has become known for extreme rhetoric in support of Trump’s lie that the election was stolen, including promoting a “Deep State Target List” and calling for “live-streamed swatting raids” against Trump’s enemies.

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