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Joe Biden

Should governments ban TikTok? Can they?

The U.S. House of Representatives voted 352-65 on March 13, 2024, to require TikTok’s parent company, China-based ByteDance, to sell the app or face a nationwide ban on TikTok. President Joe Biden said on March 8 that he would sign the legislation if it reached his desk.

The popular video social media app had 149 million users in the U.S. as of January 2024. Many of them contacted Congress to protest the possibility of a ban.

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Revealed: Trump allies' ties to indicted Biden impeachment witness

An American company that paid an indicted FBI informant who testified in the Joe Biden impeachment inquiry has ties to a British company owned by associates of Donald Trump in Dubai, according to a new report.

The Guardian reported that business filings and court documents show Smirnov, who has been accused of lying to investigators about the president and his son Hunter Biden, was paid $600,000 in 2020 by a company called Economic Transformation Technologies (ETT), and the indictment shows that same year he started lying to the FBI about the Bidens.

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'I am a bona fide sexist': MAGA host says 'women need to stop whining' about pay gap

Dr. Gina Loudon, a television host who supports Donald Trump, said that women are at fault for the gender pay gap.

Axios reported this week that female White House workers made less than men on average.

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'Lied flat out': Morning Joe trashes Katie Britt for 'doubling down' on falsehoods

The entire panel on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" pounced on Sen. Katie Britt (R-AL) for blowing off accusations she has been repeatedly lying about a sexual assault victim in an effort to malign President Joe Biden long before she brought it up in last week's State of the Union response.

After sharing a clip of Britt appearing on Sen Ted Cruz's podcast laughing it up about Saturday Night Live spoofing her "scary mom" act, co-host Joe Scarborough wondered why it is Republican lawmakers can't admit it when they are wrong.

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House Republicans scrambling to 'save face' with their Biden impeachment in a death spiral

House Republicans, frustrated with their inability to get any of their accusations of corruption aimed at President Joe Biden to stick, are now making plans to try to get the Justice Department to intercede on their behalf and file criminal charges against him.

After a series of public hearings held by House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-KY) and House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-OH) went nowhere and one of their key witnesses was arrested by the FBI for lying, House Republicans are regrouping and looking to "save face" according to the New York Times' Luke Broadwater.

According to the Times report, making criminal referrals aimed at Biden and his son Hunter Biden to the DOJ "would be largely symbolic" and would appear to be a bid to keep Donald Trump happy as he seeks a return to the Oval Office.

ALSO READ: House Republican giggles over Hitler praise — and admits he never listens to Trump

The report also added that "it would avoid a repeat of the humiliating process House Republicans, who have a tiny and dwindling majority, went through last month with the impeachment of Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the homeland security secretary."

Furthermore, Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-ND) admitted there is little reason to believe a Biden impeachment is likely.

"There’s nothing that I’ve heard in the last couple of weeks that says that we are anywhere close to having the votes," he admitted.

Speaking on Fox News, Comer hinted the criminal referrals could sit and wait for a new administration — possibly headed by Trump.

“At the end of the day, what does accountability look like? It looks like criminal referrals. It looks like referring people to the Department of Justice,” Comer explained. “If Merrick Garland’s Department of Justice won’t take any potential criminal referrals seriously, then maybe the next president, with a new attorney general, will.”

The report added, "The potential change in strategy also comes as Republicans have lost seats in the House, making impeachment all the more unlikely. With the departure next week of Representative Ken Buck, Republican of Colorado, the party will be down to 218 votes in the House, a bare majority of the 435-member body."

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'No court will uphold' possible Judge Cannon dismissal of Mar-a-Lago charges: Morning Joe

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough ripped federal judge Aileen Cannon for even considering whether to dismiss the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case against Donald Trump.

The U.S. District Court judge will hear arguments Thursday morning on whether Trump had the authority under the Presidential Records Act to declassify and retain any government documents he wanted after leaving the White House, and the "Morning Joe" host cast doubt on Cannon's ethics.

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Trump waging psychological warfare using 'one of the main tactics of autocrats': pollster

Wayward Republican pollster Sarah Longwell said on Thursday that former President Donald Trump is essentially waging psychological warfare against American voters by overloading their capacity to process outrage.

During an appearance on CNN, Longwell was asked about a recent column by the Financial Times' Edward Luce that argued about a dangerous acceptance and resignation among Americans about Trump's nonstop falsehoods.

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Biden blasts 'loser' Trump as campaign slugfest intensifies

President Joe Biden needled "loser" Donald Trump Wednesday, in his first battleground campaign stop since the two rivals secured their parties' nominations for what promises to be one of the most rancorous elections in US history.

Speaking to supporters in Milwaukee in the crucial swing state of Wisconsin, the Democrat also blasted his hard-right Republican nemesis for describing immigrants as "vermin."

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‘I’ve been so busy’: Speaker Johnson says no time to assess Biden impeachment evidence

Exactly three months ago, Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson moved his predecessor's impeachment inquiry of President Joe Biden into a full-blown, authorized impeachment investigation. He's not quite sure yet if there's enough evidence to actually impeach the President.

Democrats have repeatedly made the case President Joe Biden has committed no impeachable offenses, which was reinforced when Republicans' latest star witness was indicted for lying to the FBI about the very evidence he provided, evidence Republicans based their impeachment investigation 0n.

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U.S. election tests Trump's 'Teflon Don' image

He was impeached twice, found liable in fraud and sexual abuse lawsuits, charged with dozens of felonies and declared politically dead again and again -- but count Donald Trump out at your peril.

Eight months ahead of the US presidential election, and days before he is due to stand trial for alleged 2016 campaign finance violations, the Republican tycoon looks as strong politically as he ever has.

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Majority of Americans agree: Decline of unions bad for country

Most Americans think the declining number of unionized workers over the past few decades has been bad for the country, according to a poll released Tuesday from the Pew Research Center.

Pew found 54% of U.S. adults say the decline has been bad for the country, and 59% say it has been bad for working people. The center found 69% of Democrats think the decline has been bad for the country, and 40% of Republicans felt that way.

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Sanders and Senate Dems warn Louis DeJoy: Don't mess with USPS workers or mail delivery

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders on Wednesday led a letter to Postmaster General Louis DeJoy about the potential impacts of mail processing facility reviews that are underway as part of the United States Postal Service leader's controversial decadelong Delivering for America plan.

Sanders (I-Vt.), Sen. Angus King (I-Maine), and 19 Democrats explained that the process is underway at 59 locations across 35 states, and while the USPS claims "there will be no career layoffs or slowed service, we are concerned these facility reviews will functionally result in both."

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At disused New York airport, a migrant camp isolated from the city

Gusts of wind lash the runways of a former airfield in New York as migrant families with children slowly walk across, eyeing the city's world-famous skyline off in the distance.

The field, described by aid workers as in the "middle of nowhere," is providing emergency shelter for 1,800 migrants, a potent symbol of the immigration crisis facing the American metropolis.

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