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Trump has a 'real problem' after comments to Black crowd: MSNBC analyst

Donald Trump's borderline racist comments to a crowd at the Black Conservative Federation's Annual BCF Honors Gala in South Carolina may have been given a pass by the conservatives in attendance, but they won't play nationally according to an MSNBC analyst.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "The Weekend," analyst Garrett Haake agreed with the hosts that Trump received tepid applause to some of his more outlandish remarks and said the former president may have turned off Black voters even more as he tries to peel them away from President Joe Biden.

After watching a clip of Trump telling the crowd, "These lights are so bright in my eyes I can't see too many people out there... I can only see the Black ones. I can't see any white ones. That's how far I've come. That's a long way isn't it?" Haake stated remarks like that are problematic.

"Garrett, the comments the president made to that room, what was the reaction inside the room? Because from what I could hear from the clip, it wasn't this overwhelming," co-host Michael Steele prompted. "It was like 'Oh, okay. is that what we're doing now?' The idea that he could stand in front of a Black audience and make comments like I can't see anybody, you know, because the white lights are too bright, but I could see the black people — I don't know how that translates to that room. What was the feedback? What did you hear from that?"

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

"Michael, here's the thing: in that room, I mean, this is sort of a self-selected audience ... this is a room full of Trump supporters, right?" the MSNBC correspondent pointed out. "So I think this is a different audience than the broader audience that he's trying to reach where's there's a little bit of an 'Oh, shrug it off, that's how Trump talks in the room."'

"When these clips are played around the country to that broader African-American audience whom he is desperately trying to make some inroads with, I think that's when you have the real problem here," he added.

Watch below or at the link.

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Trump vows to crush Haley as Republican race heads south

Donald Trump and Nikki Haley go head-to-head Saturday in South Carolina's Republican primary, with the ex-president expected to trounce his former charge in her home state as he closes in on the nomination.

Haley was a popular governor of the Palmetto State for six years before becoming Trump's UN ambassador in 2017, but her old boss is backed by the party establishment and nearly two-thirds of voters in opinion polling.

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Democrats discredit GOP claims on IVF as Republicans try to regain ground after fallout

One week after the Alabama State Supreme Court ruled frozen human embryos are "children," causing several medical institutions to pause their in-vitro fertilization (IVF) programs, Alabama and the GOP have seen tremendous nationwide anger, upset, and confusion from the left and the right over the decision, the Christian nationalist chief judge, and the Republican Party that set this in motion.

Now, GOP lawmakers and political groups are trying to regain ground after some Republicans quickly embraced the decision that, as White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre predicted Tuesday, would cause “exactly the type of chaos that we expected when the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and paved the way for politicians to dictate some of the most personal decisions families can make.”

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Why was GOP’s star witness re-arrested? He may have been trying to flee the country

The re-arrest of Alexander Smirnov, the former FBI informant who allegedly may have provided House Republicans with Kremlin propaganda that was the basis for their efforts to impeach President Joe Biden and attack his son Hunter, raised some eyebrows on Thursday.

Smirnov, once considered House Republicans' Jim Comer and Jim Jordan's star witness, was re-arrested even after a magistrate judge ordered him released, and at his attorneys' offices, raising eyebrows from even national security experts, insisting there had better be a good reason for it.

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Republicans start to back off controversial Alabama IVF ruling

A wave of Republicans led by Donald Trump vowed Friday to protect in vitro fertilization in the wake of an Alabama court ruling that said frozen embryos should be considered children, in what could become a galvanizing issue in the 2024 election.

Democrats have made the preservation of reproductive rights a central part of their campaign, with women in conservative states that have strict abortion bans facing problems accessing emergency care for life-threatening pregnancies.

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Swag bonanza: Mind-boggling merch on sale at U.S. conservative meet

National Harbor (United States) (AFP) - It is Friday morning at America's largest conservative gathering and speakers talk law and order, religious freedom and small government on the main stage as convention-goers crowd a pinball machine downstairs that makes light of the 2021 assault on the US Capitol.

"J6 Insurrection" -- an "educational documentary game" -- is one of the hottest attractions among a cornucopia of merchandise available a short escalator ride from the main hall at the four-day Conservative Political Action Conference in the Washington suburbs.

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'Dereliction of duty': GOP under fire for ignoring warnings about Biden FBI informant

Republicans knew ahead of time that the source of the 1023 report they used as the basis for their investigations into President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter was dubious, yet they charged ahead anyway. Both Democrats and even some Republicans are now railing against the GOP's rush to accept the credibility of the now-debunked report.

According to the New York Times, the FBI warned Republicans that the confidential source's claims in the 1023 report could not be verified and should be taken with a grain of salt. Chief among those claims was that the Bidens each supposedly solicited a $5 million bribe from Ukrainian energy company Burisma during Biden's time as vice president. However, the indictment of that source, Alexander Smirnov, alleges that he fabricated that charge — possibly with the help of Russian intelligence agencies he was in contact with.

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CPAC all about paranoia and anger: 'I'm worried that we're going to have a civil war'

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — Civil war is on the minds of many conservatives.

At least many of those gathered just outside of the nation’s capital this week for CPAC, the Conservative Political Action Conference. In recent years, the annual meeting has evolved into a populist confab remade in the image of former President Donald Trump.

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'Pandering': Trump brutally mocked for spewing 'racial tropes' at Black conservative event

Former president Donald Trump was the keynote speaker of the Black Conservative Federation's Annual BCF Honors Gala in Columbia, South Carolina, Friday, where he purportedly spread racial tropes in an effort to court minority voters.

Early in the speech, Trump celebrated being indicted several times, saying, "That's why Black people like me." He went on to make numerous other comments that were labeled as tone deaf or potentially even worse, and criticism on social media spread like wildfire.

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'I can only see the Black ones': Trump confuses CNN panel with comment at Black event

Blinded by the lights while gazing into the crowd assembled as part of Friday night's Black Conservative Federation Gala to hear him speak, former President Donald Trump tried to say he truly sees black people.

"These lights are so bright in my eyes that — I can't see too many people out there," he chafed. "But I can only see the black ones. I can't see any white ones. You see."

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Oklahoma Republican calls LGBTQ people 'filth' when asked about death of nonbinary student

A state senator from eastern Oklahoma referred to LGBTQ people as "filth" when asked at a public forum on Friday about the death of Nex Benedict, a nonbinary high school student in the Tulsa area, reported Public Radio Tulsa.

Sen. Tom Woods said that his heart went out to Benedict's family, but that regarding LGBTQ identity generally, "We are a religious state. We are going to fight to keep that filth out of the state of Oklahoma, because we’re a Christian state. We’re a rural state. We want to lower taxes, and for people to live and work, and to go to the faith they choose."

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Legal expert stunned by 'remarkable accusation' against re-arrested anti-Biden 'informant'

Almost never does a federal judge accuse outright the defense of aiding their client to flee the country.

And yet, that's what U.S. District Judge Otis Wright II deduced.

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'Bad for Trump': Law professor explains Supreme Court's delay on immunity ruling

The SCOTUS wait game on whether to keep the January 6 prosecution on hold as Trump has asked is likely due to some back chambers maneuverings. But one expert believes the nine justices have already made their decision.

"First, we expect whatever the Court does to be a 'miscellaneous order,'" Steve Vladeck, a legal scholar and University of Texas Law School professor, wrote in a Twitter thread.

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