Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Latest Headlines

'Freudian slip!' Jasmine Crockett pounces on CNN host's remarks on Trump DOJ official

A Democratic lawmaker from Texas playfully pounced Thursday afternoon on a CNN anchor's slight slip-up after President Donald Trump's deputy attorney general tried to argue that he didn't have access to critical materials ahead of his interview with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell.

Earlier in the day, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche posted on X that "law enforcement didn't have the materials Epstein's estate hid" ahead of his interview. The post was meant to explain why Blanche didn't push back on Maxwell's assertions that she never saw Trump at Epstein's house or with any of his victims.

Keep reading... Show less

'Put us out of business!' Outrage as GOP shutdown provision threatens to end farms

Advocates for hemp on Wednesday decried a provision of the Republican government funding law signed by President Donald Trump that tightens restrictions on the versatile plant—a move critics say will devastate a $30 billion industry.

The new restrictions set a stricter limit on the amount of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)—the psychoactive chemical in cannabis—in order to close a loophole that allowed for the sale of unregulated food and beverages containing intoxicating hemp-derived compounds.

Keep reading... Show less

GOP senator 'played hardball' with Trump to force reversal of key nomination

Sen. Tim Sheehy (R-MT) went out of his way to "play hardball" with the White House to get President Donald Trump to back down from his position of pulling Jared Isaacman's nomination for administrator of NASA, Semafor reported on Thursday.

Isaacman, a billionaire entrepreneur and commercial astronaut, is a close friend of tech tycoon Elon Musk, and Trump's initial withdrawal of his nomination was a big factor in the two men falling out spectacularly in public earlier this year. But according to the report, Musk was not the only figure rankled by the change of plans.

Keep reading... Show less

'Disgusting': MAGA host under fire after 'career-ending' take on Epstein emails

MAGA podcaster Megyn Kelly — and mother of a 14-year-old daughter — is getting slammed over saying that Jeffrey Epstein, the late financier and convicted child sex offender, was possibly "not a pedophile."

Kelly tried to make the argument that Epstein "liked 15-year-old girls" and "the very young teen types" during her podcast this week, suggesting she does not know the age of consent or what pedophilia means, The Daily Beast reports.

Keep reading... Show less

2-time Dem nominee jumps into key Texas race

Mike Collier to challenge Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick again — as an independent

Keep reading... Show less

Border Patrol chief vows retaliation after judge releases wrongly held detainees

U.S. Border Patrol chief Gregory Bovino threatened to retaliate after a federal judge suggested as many as 600 detainees could be released due to violations of a consent decree requiring warrants for arrests.

In an order issued on Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings said that the Department of Justice must release 13 detainees who were caught during the "Operation Midway Blitz" enforcement operation in Chicago. The judge also ordered the review of 600 others.

Keep reading... Show less

'Beyond horrific': Observers aghast as teen at center of Gaetz sex scandal comes forward

Reactions mounted Thursday after a woman sharing her story for the first time said that then-Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) sexually abused her when she was just 17, while she was living in a homeless shelter and trying to save money to buy braces to fix her teeth.

Laura B. Wolf, an attorney for the then-teenager and now-woman, spoke to The New York Times about the ordeal. Times journalists reached out to Wolf after a federal judge in Florida unsealed court documents that described the victim as "a then-homeless 17-year-old high schooler."

Keep reading... Show less

'Gasps across courtroom' as Trump’s DOJ gets brutal grilling from judge

A federal judge in Virginia on Thursday heard arguments in a bid from former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James to disqualify President Donald Trump-appointed prosecutor Lindsey Halligan. And, according to a CNN report, the judge's questioning of the Department of Justice at times elicited gasps from courthouse observers.

Attorneys for Comey and James argue Halligan was hand-picked by Trump to prosecute his perceived political enemies. They allege she is serving as interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia unlawfully.

Keep reading... Show less

'Most disappointing member': Colleagues skewer Speaker Johnson as House closes — again

WASHINGTON — The federal government may be open, but the House of Representatives is closed for business. Again.

The record-shattering 43-day-long shutdown coincided with an impromptu 53-day vacation for House Republicans.

Keep reading... Show less

Teen at center of Matt Gaetz sex scandal was homeless and needed money for braces: report

A woman has come forward to tell her story after the House Ethics Committee determined that then-Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) sexually abused her when she was just 17.

Laura B. Wolf, an attorney for the girl, spoke to The New York Times about the ordeal. The paper got in touch with Wolf after a federal judge in Florida unsealed court documents that described the victim as "a then-homeless 17-year-old high schooler."

Keep reading... Show less

Lauren Boebert sends cryptic message over White House pressure on Epstein vote

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) is reportedly sending mixed messages over pressures from the White House and President Donald Trump to drop her support of the discharge petition to prompt the Department of Justice to release the Jeffrey Epstein files.

Trump apparently called her and had a situation room meeting on Wednesday with Boebert, one of four Republicans expected to vote in favor of releasing the files from the late financier and pedophile, The Daily Beast reported Thursday.

Keep reading... Show less

FBI's Dan Bongino rages at GOP's Thomas Massie over whistleblower accusations

FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino harangued Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) for speculating that President Donald Trump's administration was trying to publicly out a whistleblower.

The Kentucky Republican posted a letter he had received from the FBI whistleblower's attorney that said a Thursday morning meeting at the bureau's Washington field office was intended to identify the individual who made a protected disclosure about the ongoing investigation into pipe bombs placed at the Democratic and Republican national headquarters on January 5, 2021.

Keep reading... Show less

'McCarthy moment coming' for Trump as he 'may not outlast' Epstein files: expert

Donald Trump's "McCarthy moment" could be coming, according to a law expert who says he might not outlast the Jeffrey Epstein files.

20,000 new documents were released by the Republican-led panel, with several emails further tying Trump to Epstein. The ex-US attorney for the Northern District of Alabama, Joyce Vance, believes this could be a moment Trump doesn't survive. She wrote, "Is Trump’s McCarthy moment finally coming?"

Keep reading... Show less