Joe Biden

Haley soldiers on despite growing inevitability of Trump

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Is it political strategy, donor pressure or perhaps hubris? Nikki Haley is vowing "the fight goes on" against Donald Trump, positioning herself as a viable option in case the scandal-plagued Republican frontrunner's campaign implodes.

Haley has gone zero for four in early contests for the Republican presidential nomination, including an embarrassing 20-point drubbing Saturday in her home state of South Carolina where she served as governor.

'He's gotten more unhinged': Former Trump aide points to new signs he's getting worse

According to a former Donald Trump White House communications official, the former president's rhetoric is reaching "unhinged" levels as he scrambles to return to the Oval Office.

Speaking with MSNBC host Jen Psaki, Sarah Matthews — who quit following the Jan. 6 insurrection — claimed Trump's open embrace of extremist racist rhetoric should be alarming to anyone who has watched him recently.


"I'm sure you've been watching, because he's been so outspoken in the recent days and weeks, and you are someone, I know from the role, you probably read speeches, you edited speeches, you are very familiar with how he talks.," Psaki prompted. "As you are watching, do you think he's gotten worse, more unhinged?"

"I do think he's gotten more unhinged in his rhetoric," Matthews replied. "Obviously, Donald Trump's first four years in office were marked by lots of controversies. but I think that the type of rhetoric that he is using today, it's really concerning."

"It's almost Hitler-esque in a way, when he talks about immigration, poisoning the blood of our country," she continued. "He is trying to prey on people's worst instincts and get them angry and riled up; that is something he tends to do, but it's just the rhetoric that he is using, it's really concerning to me now."

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Trump's VP hopefuls are 'happy to feast' on 'roadkill' Pence to pander to MAGA diehards

Former Vice President Mike Pence became a target for MAGA fans after refusing to interfere with President Joe Biden's victory Donald Trump.

Nearly four years later, as the former president seeks to secure a second presidency amid 91 criminal charges, those vying to be Trump's running mate have been seeking advice from Pence on how to handle a MAGA administration, according to a Sunday, February 25 Politico report.

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'Hell no!' Donna Brazile reams Reince Priebus for defending Trump's racist speech

Democratic strategist Donna Brazile tore into former Republican National Committee Chair Reince Priebus after he offered a defense of a recent "racist" speech given by Donald Trump to the Black Conservative Federation.

During a Sunday panel discussion on ABC's This Week program, host Martha Raddatz noted Trump had been criticized for saying Black voters like him because he has been charged with crimes.

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Jim Jordan throws Biden 'informant' under the bus: 'Maybe the guy did lie — I don't know'

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) admitted that former FBI informant Alexander Smirnov may have lied when he tried to connect President Joe Biden to allegedly corrupt business dealings.

During a Sunday interview on Fox News, host Maria Bartiromo noted that Smirnov had twice been arrested for making false statements after Republicans used intelligence he provided to the FBI to attack Biden.

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'They really don't care': Former CIA director rips the GOP for getting played by Russia

Former CIA Director John Brennan pounced on the House GOP leadership for using a now-indicted Russian purveyor of lies about President Joe Biden to be their central witness in their bid to impeach the president.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "The Weekend," Brennan said it doesn't matter if they knew they were being played or not by their informant Alexander Smirnov who is now in custody for lying to the FBI.

Speaking with co-host Symone Sanders-Townsend, Brennan didn't mince words when taking his shot at Rep's James Comer (R-KY) and Jim Jordan (R-OH).

ALSO READ: How Donald Trump is spreading a dangerous mental illness to his supporters

''I think it's unclear whether they knew or not, quite frankly" he began before adding, "Based on what I've seen, they really don't care if these things are true or not.

"They will just try to use them to advance their efforts to undermine the integrity of President Biden, as well as to advance their impeachment process," he continued. "So, therefore, they seized upon something that was clearly on un-evaluated information, it was raw, it was obtained by the FBI. Director Christopher Wray initially tried to resist them being provided to the Hill, but then the pressure increased and it was eventually shared with them."

"As is now clear, Mr. Smirnov is a serial liar," he added. "Nothing that he was claiming about President Biden was true. Therefore, I think the whole impeachment effort, which was resting heavily on that is really quite questionable."

Watch below or at the link.

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'I've got to push back': NBC host and Byron Donalds battle over Trump's 'racist' speech

NBC host Kristen Welker and Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) disagreed over a speech Donald Trump gave to a group of Black conservatives.

In a speech Friday to the Black Conservative Federation's annual gala, Trump argued that African-Americans like him because of his legal problems.

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Trump is flustering foreign leaders who are prepping for his return to the White House

Donald Trump has not been elected the next president of the United States. He is not even the official Republican candidate. But Trump’s presence in the 2024 electoral race is already dictating domestic and foreign political agendas – without him even setting foot in the White House for a second term.

The idea that presidential wannabes influence politics before an election is nothing new. Candidates shape the domestic agenda to help them win an election or govern afterwards. Other countries also always prepare for the new leader to come. Yet the influence Trump is having right now is more excessive and more disruptive than we’ve previously seen this far out from an election, both at home and abroad.

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Prosecution in a democracy is a lot different than persecution in Putin's Russia

The death of Russian dissident Alexei Navalny, announced on Feb. 16, 2024, lays bare to the world the costs of political persecutions. Although his cause of death remains unknown, the 47-year-old died while serving a 19-year sentence in a Siberian penal colony. “Three days ago, Vladimir Putin killed my husband,” said Navalny’s widow, Yulia Navalnaya, in a Feb. 19 video.

As an anti-corruption activist turned opposition leader, Navalny shone a light on the brutal excesses of President Putin’s regime. Like Navalny, Putin’s political opponents are routinely subjected to sham investigations, detained without due process and often die under suspicious circumstances. Navalny survived poisoning in 2020.

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'They are going to empty the coffers': GOP panics as Trump’s legal costs hurt fundraising

Former President Donald Trump's mounting legal bills are threatening the Republican Party's ability to fundraise ahead of a pivotal presidential election.

The Washington Post reports that the Republican National Committee (RNC) is already starting to fret about its finances given that it's trailing the Democratic National Committee (DNC) in fundraising by an almost three-to-one margin. The DNC has roughly $25 million in cash on hand, compared to the RNC's $8.7 million. And between President Joe Biden's campaign and the Trump campaign, the difference looms even larger: Biden had more than $56 million in cash available by the end of January 2024, whereas Trump had less than $31 million. At the end of 2023, Biden also led in unique donors, with 172,000 to Trump's 143,000 unique donors.

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Trump predicts ‘losing World War III’ if he is not elected in 2024

Former President Donald Trump painted a bleak picture Saturday of what would happen to the United States should voters reelect Joe Biden to the Oval Office in November.

The front-runner in the 2024 GOP presidential primary, who made similar predictions ahead of the 2020 presidential election, told attendees at the Conservative Political Action Conference — known as CPAC — just outside Washington, D.C., that only he could provide America a better outcome.

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Biden or Trump, hawkish economic approach on China to intensify

WASHINGTON — In a shift from tit-for-tat tariffs and strong-arm tactics to tech restrictions and investment curbs, U.S. policy towards China has become more targeted under President Joe Biden — though still hardline.

Despite differences between Democrats and Republicans, analysts expect Washington's approach to Beijing will only become tougher, whether Biden or former president Donald Trump wins another White House term.

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Democracy experts flag Trump's 'most disgusting statement' from CPAC speech

Donald Trump said something at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on Saturday that stood out to experts on democracy and authoritarianism.

The former president has consistently cast himself as the victim of Joe Biden, even going as far as to compare himself to the man who was purportedly killed by Putin because he stood up to the leader politically.

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