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America's war assembly lines face 'crisis': 'Something is going wrong'

On May 1, roughly 4,000 employees of defense manufacturers — including Lockheed Martin — went on strike. And in another strike, around 3,000 employees of Pratt & Whitney (which manufactures essential components of Lockheed Martin’s F-35 fighter jet) walked off the job in Hartford, Connecticut.

In an article published by Politico on Monday, reporter Christopher Leonard warns that dissatisfaction among employees of defense manufacturers is problematic for the United States from a national defense standpoint.

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Key signals flagged that doctors are 'worried' about Trump's health

California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom took a swing Monday at President Donald Trump's health claims, saying "most people don’t take that many cognitive tests unless a doctor is worried" — adding to the recent jabs at the president's cognitive and physical health.

Trump, 79, announced during a flight on Air Force One that he was recently at Walter Reed Medical Center for an aptitude test, The Daily Beast reports.

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'Anarchist' tries to hire $45K hit man to kill Pam Bondi: authorities

A self-described anarchist tried to pay $45,000 to have a hit man kill Attorney General Pam Bondi, according to authorities.

Tyler Avalos, 29, of Minnesota, shared the threat on TikTok and said he wanted Bondi "dead or alive," but "preferably dead," NBC News reported, citing an FBI affidavit.

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‘Laid a trap’: Ex-GOP operative outlines Dems’ ‘breathtaking’ plan to bait Republicans

Former Republican Party operative Richard Porter outlined Monday what he called Senate Democrats’ “breathtaking” strategy to bait Republicans amid the ongoing government shutdown, a plan he suggested could both end the shutdown and hand Democrats a long-sought victory on eliminating a key Senate procedure.

“You think that the Democrats have laid a trap for Republicans, essentially, and want [them] to do the Democrats' dirty work?” asked Tom Bevan, co-founder and president of RealClearPolitics, speaking with Porter on the polling aggregator’s podcast.

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'I know this sounds wacko': Key signs flagged that Trump will never leave the White House

An analyst pointed to signs that President Donald Trump will never leave the White House, admitting, "I know this sounds crazy."

Strategist Julie Roginsky tells MSNBC anchor Chris Jansing on Monday that Trump's response that he's not ruling out a third term — which is unconstitutional — and that he "would love to do it" signals he will not leave office.

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'It won’t work': Analyst warns Trump repeating major mistake from ex-president

An analyst warns the "Trump-inflicted damage" to the U.S. economy will backfire on the Republican Party because "Americans are not fooled."

In an opinion piece for MSNBC, Helaine R. Olen, author of "Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry," outlines how President Donald Trump's campaign promises to bring prices down and improve the economy hasn't happened.

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The one official best positioned to stop Trump only has two months left on the job

There's one government agency that the Washington Post says can push back on President Donald Trump, but they don't have long to do it.

Writing Monday, the Post explained that the Government Accountability Office has an appointee whose term expires in two months.

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Second campaign manager jumps ship on embattled Dem candidate after one week: report

The teetering campaign of Maine oysterman Graham Platner to be the Democratic Party’s nominee to oppose Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) should she run for re-election in 2026 suffered another blow over the weekend.

According to a report from Axios’ Holly Otterbein on Monday, Kevin Brown, who took the place of departed former political director Genevieve McDonald on the Platner campaign, is bowing out after taking the job last Tuesday.

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Masked men pose as federal agents to invade California home and zip tie family

The Riverside County Sheriff's Department said it was investigating after masked men claiming to be FBI agents invaded a California home and detained a family in Jurupa Valley.

Ring doorbell camera video posted to social media last week shows three masked men claiming to have a search warrant before barging into the home.

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Lawsuits could finally expose Jeffrey Epstein's network as Congress continues stalling

Legal experts say that new lawsuits could reveal late financier Jeffrey Epstein's ties to banks and avoid the "embarrassing partisan gamesmanship" blocking justice for survivors and "accomplish what lawmakers had failed to do."

Two new lawsuits filed against Bank of America and the Bank of New York Mellon (BNY) by an anonymous plaintiff allege that the financial institutions "illicitly enabled Epstein’s sex trafficking," The Guardian reports Monday. The suits are led by Sigrid S. McCawley, of Boies Schiller Flexner, and Brad Edwards of Edwards Henderson, both longtime representatives of Epstein victims.

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'We didn't ask for this': Nebraska town fuming over 'asinine' ICE takeover of camp

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is creating a different type of disruption in the town McCook, Nebraska, by making a deal with the Republican governor to take over a work camp and convert it into another undocumented immigrant holding facility.

That led to lawsuits filed by the town's residents.

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'They're trying to set him up': Legal expert warns Jack Smith to avoid GOP 'perjury trap'

Former Watergate prosecutor Nick Akerman thinks that Republicans are trying to catch former special counsel Jack Smith in a perjury trap so they can arrest him for investigating President Donald Trump.

Speaking to MSNBC on Monday morning, Akerman, a former assistant U.S. Attorney in the Southern District of New York, said that it's clear Smith is refusing to speak with Congress unless the testimony is public.

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Trump 'totally screwing his own people' with punitive moves against blue states: analyst

President Donald Trump has approved millions of dollars in disaster aid to states he won in 2024 while denying funds to states that did not back him, but an analyst explained that he was hurting his own supporters in blue states.

The president signed off on aid for Nebraska, North Dakota, Missouri and Alaska, going out of his way to point out that he'd won those states when announcing the funds, but denied requests for relief from Maryland, Vermont and Illinois, and The New Republic's Greg Sargent said Trump was making his intentions clear.

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