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'My patience has run out': Josh Hawley aims tantrum at GOP leadership

On Tuesday, the "Big Four" congressional leaders — House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA), Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) — met with President Joe Biden in the White House to hammer out an agreement on funding the government ahead of a looming deadline.

It ended with one Senate Republican publicly expressing his frustrations with his GOP colleagues.

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'Inexperienced zealot' Mike Johnson blasted for not being up to job of speaker

When Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA) was confirmed as House speaker in late October, the fact that House Republicans voted unanimously in his favor came as a shock in light of the weeks of chaos that followed the ousting of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) from that position.

House Republicans couldn't come together on the nominations of Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) or Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN), but they united for Johnson.

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Mike Johnson says Biden must use executive orders after calling them ‘gimmicks'

Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson says President Joe Biden must issue executive orders to address the southern border, just days after scoffing at claims the President was considering using his executive authority, calling those orders "election year gimmicks."

Republicans, with the assistance of – and some say, at the direction of – Donald Trump derailed a bipartisan border bill several weeks ago.

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Tommy Tuberville gets a brutal fact check from Alabama reporter on 'crime-ridden' New York

Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) attacked the city of New York for supposedly being crime-ridden on Tuesday, only to receive a brutal fact check from a reporter in his home state.

In a post on his Twitter account, Tuberville mocked President Joe Biden for traveling to New York this week to appear on Seth Meyers' show on NBC.

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Messy infighting at Michigan GOP about to get a 'hilarious degree' worse: columnist

Michigan will hold its primary election Tuesday as its state Republican Party remains in turmoil — and the situation could become a lot messier.

President Joe Biden faces a protest vote on the Democratic side regarding his policies in Israel and Gaza, but chaos is brewing over the selection of 16 of the state's 55 Republican National Convention delegates in the primary contest, which will be followed Saturday with the selection of 39 more at a state party convention, wrote MSNBC columnist Steve Benen.

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Trump sounds like a '1950s redneck' when talking about Black people: ex-GOP chair

During a Friday night speech in Columbia, South Carolina, Donald Trump offered some reasons why he believes that Black voters should support him. Trump, discussing the fact that he is facing four criminal indictments, argued that his legal problems should make him appealing to Black voters.

Trump told the crowd, "The mug shot, we've all seen the mugshot. And you know who embraced it more than anybody else? The Black population. It's incredible. You see Black people walking around with my mugshot."

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‘Conspiring with Putin’: Democratic congressman brings the hammer down on Jim Jordan

U.S. Rep. Daniel Goldman (D-NY) is going after Jim Jordan, alleging the House Republican Judiciary Chair is "conspiring" with Russian President Vladimir Putin after posting a lengthy 2477 word diatribe that includes the thoroughly debunked "Burisma" claims even after the source of those claims, now-indicted former FBI source Alexander Smirnov, acknowledged it was propaganda fed to him from Kremlin officials.

"There are too many false statements in this fiction novel to address here, but it’s shocking that @Jim_Jordan continues to promote the Burisma hoax even after he learned that it was falsely peddled by Putin," charged Congressman Goldman, an attorney and former federal prosecutor.

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'Very suspicious': James Comer pushes new conspiracy theory about FBI protecting Biden

Rep. James Comer (R-KY) is now floating conspiracy theories about the FBI protecting President Joe Biden — despite the fact that the current FBI director was appointed by former President Donald Trump.

During an interview on Fox Business, Comer was asked about the recent indictment of one-time FBI informant Alexander Smirnov, who allegedly lied about President Joe Biden receiving a multimillion-dollar bribe from Ukrainian energy company Burisma.

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'If he wins all this stuff goes away': Trump sees White House as only shot at survival

Donald Trump doesn't have to be goaded into making fundraising calls now that his legal bills are skyrocketing.

The former president has hosted more traditional fundraising events and made donor calls, and he's quietly been raising money for the Republican National Committee's "nominee fund," which he's peeved that he can't access until he's officially the GOP nominee, reported Marc Caputo for The Bulwark.

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4 things to watch in Michigan’s presidential primary

With polls open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., Tuesday is the final day Michiganders can cast their vote in the presidential primary.

As state election workers prepare to tally selections for each party’s preferred presidential candidate, here are four key things to watch.

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'Doesn't hold water': CNN analyst takes a hatchet to Ken Chesebro's latest defense

CNN earlier this week discovered new evidence that seemingly undermines testimony former Trump election lawyer Ken Chesebro gave to prosecutors in Michigan, and at least one legal expert isn't buying his excuses.

While testifying in Michigan's investigation of the Trump fake electors scheme, Chesebro denied that he ever used Twitter to post about his legal theories about blocking President Joe Biden from taking office.

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U.S. prosecutor seeks to gag Trump in his first criminal trial

The prosecutors in Donald Trump's first criminal trial next month asked Monday for the judge to impose a gag order on the former president, arguing that he had a record of disparaging witnesses.

Trump stands accused in the case of paying hush money to a porn star, for which he faces 34 counts of allegedly doctoring business records as part of a cover-up.

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Pentagon says privacy issues fed secrecy over Austin's cancer care

The Pentagon said Monday that privacy concerns contributed to the secrecy surrounding Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin's cancer treatment, but that it found no evidence of intentional wrongdoing or obfuscation.

Austin controversially kept US President Joe Biden in the dark about his prostate cancer diagnosis for weeks, while the commander-in-chief and Congress were not told until days after he was hospitalized on January 1 for complications from his treatment.

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