RawStory

Latest Headlines

Rebel Republican reveals deal GOP leaders offered him to give up anti-Trump vote

A retiring Republican lawmaker in a key competitive House district says that Republican leaders went so far as to offer him exceptions from President Donald Trump's tariffs in his own district, to stop him from voting against the rules to shield the tariffs from a congressional veto.

According to Politico, Rep. Don Bacon (R-NE), a frequent rebel against major party-line issues whose Omaha-based district frequently votes for Democrats in presidential elections, said he had no intention of changing his mind on the issue. “There’s so many companies struggling against tariffs, and that’s what the president needs to hear,” he told the paper. “Our farmers are struggling.”

Keep reading... Show less

6 Republicans gift Democrats huge economic win as Trump fumes at House vote loss

The Democratic Party has been handed a huge win against Donald Trump, thanks to a collection of rebel Republican Party members.

A bid to block tariffs against Canada has proven successful, with the House passing through the vote with help from GOP representatives, even after Trump put the pressure on Republican reps to hold the line with a Truth Social post. He wrote, "Any Republican, in the House or the Senate, that votes against TARIFFS will seriously suffer the consequences come Election time, and that includes Primaries!

Keep reading... Show less

Trump DOJ's latest move 'raises a darker possibility' about admin: CNN

A closeness between Donald Trump and the Department of Justice has broken down a White House tradition that has lasted for years, a political analyst claimed.

Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin, the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, told US Attorney General Pam Bondi that she was responsible for turning the DoJ into "Trump's instrument of revenge". Raskin added, "Trump orders up prosecutions like pizza, and you deliver every time."

Keep reading... Show less

A 'boneheaded' Trump plan is a 'dry run' for 'emergency' everyone will pay for: expert

A fiscal emergency could come to light because of Donald Trump's ongoing economic policies, a former Director of the US Management and Budget has claimed.

Mitch Daniels believes the first year of tariffs is enough to see where the economy is headed, and it could lead to millions paying more than they already do. Writing in The Washington Post, the former director suggests that everyday Americans are going to foot the bill for the Trump admin's financial shortcomings.

Keep reading... Show less

'That's an enormous thing': Reporter flags DOJ's 'massive scandal' that's being overlooked

The evidence is mounting that President Donald Trump's DOJ spied on members of Congress to determine how they were going to interrogate Attorney General Pam Bondi on the Jeffrey Epstein case files, MS NOW justice correspondent Ken Dilanian told Mika Brzezinski on "Morning Joe" Thursday — and it could blow up into a massive scandal.

"Ken, I'm interested in something specific that we we could see from one camera angle yesterday, and it looked like the attorney general had like the search history of the lawmaker that she was talking with up," said Brzezinski. "And I don't know if that's her search or whose search history it is. What reporting do you have on that? What's going on there?"

Keep reading... Show less

Nobel Prize winner says one Trump policy will 'send thousands to an early grave'

Job policies made by the Donald Trump administration will send members of the public to an early death, according to a prize-winning economist.

Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman believes the president and his team did very little to ease job growth worries, and even with the recent report of better-than-expected numbers, there is still a growing concern the Trump team has yet to tackle. The economist called this period one of stagnation and believes that if it goes on any longer, people will die.

Keep reading... Show less

'Paranoia?' Dem reveals lengths DOJ going to 'stay ahead' of congressional Epstein probe

A Democratic lawmaker confirmed the Department of Justice is essentially peering over lawmakers' shoulders as they search through the unredacted Jeffrey Epstein files.

Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-CA) appeared Thursday on "CNN This Morning," where she discussed the previous day's contentious hearing with Attorney General Pam Bondi and the binder she brought with her that showed the search history for lawmakers who pored through the Justice Department's case files on the late sex offender.

Keep reading... Show less

Reporter reveals new info about 'super duper secret weapon' that closed Texas airspace

Axios reporter Marc Caputo told MS NOW he's been seeking answers about the mysterious military exercise involving an anti-drone weapon and "party balloons" that shut down airspace around El Paso, Texas for 10 days — and while he has found some answers, much remains a mystery.

"You've been reporting on this all day," said anchor Willie Geist. "Yesterday we woke up. We're discussing on the show yesterday there was some concern about is there about to be a military operation? Are we going to strike drug cartels, the United States military? Very confusing. Contradicting claims by different departments of the government, and the FAA saying we had to do this because we didn't know what the heck was going on. What did you find after sifting through all this?"

Keep reading... Show less

Pam Bondi mistakenly 're-energized' Trump's enemies with latest backfire: MS NOW

Attorney General Pam Bondi appeared for another combative congressional hearing Wednesday, but MS NOW's Mika Brzezinski said her pugnacious performance may have backfired.

The attorney general hurled insults and interrupted Democratic lawmakers as they grilled her over the Jeffrey Epstein case and President Donald Trump's long-standing ties to the late sex offender, and the "Morning Joe" co-host warned that Bondi likely inflamed interest in the matter.

Keep reading... Show less

'Lying through his teeth': Joe Scarborough trashes Trump crew's latest Epstein dodges

MS NOW's Joe Scarborough tore into what he sees as the ongoing Trump administration coverup of the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking case files, following a contentious congressional hearing from Wednesday in which Attorney General Pam Bondi lashed out at every lawmaker trying to ask her tough questions.

"She's making a fool of herself," said Scarborough. "She actually thinks that everybody's a five-year-old in that room. Like she's exposed, making a fool of herself."

Keep reading... Show less

Ex-Jack Smith deputy rebukes Bondi after House hearing — and mounts Dem run for Congress

JP Cooney, a former federal prosecutor turned Democratic candidate for the U.S. House in Virginia’s proposed Seventh District, rebuked his former boss, Attorney General Pam Bondi, for telling a House panel on Wednesday his former division engaged in “weaponization.”

“I can tell you which administration that the weaponization was ended under,” Bondi said in a fiery exchange with Rep. Joe Neguse (D-CO) during a House Judiciary Committee hearing.

Keep reading... Show less

IRS admits it accidentally handed immigrant tax data to ICE: 'Mistakes are inevitable'

The IRS has improperly disclosed immigrant tax data to Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers.

Dottie Romo, the tax agency’s chief risk and control officer, confirmed in sworn testimony that the agency had given information to ICE agents and the Department of Homeland Security, The Washington Post reported. Jacob Bogage, Jeff Stein, and Perry Stein, wrote that IRS representatives shared information for thousands of immigrants with ICE officials.

Keep reading... Show less

Expert pinpoints method for everyday citizens to stop Trump: 'Hit them where they feel it'

A group Donald Trump is reliant on could be the president's undoing, according to an expert who believes losing said support will cripple the president.

Scott Galloway, a marketing professor at NYU Stern School of Business, believes if technology company leaders turn on Trump then the president will have little power in office. He told the The Daily Beast about his plan to put pressure on Big Tech leaders like Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos.

Keep reading... Show less