Joe Biden

To protect election workers, Ohio senators would hide their addresses

A bipartisan pair of Ohio senators want to shield election officials’ addresses from public records requests. Sens. Theresa Gavarone, R-Bowling Green and Bill DeMora, D-Columbus, would extend a protection already provided to police and court officials to Ohio election workers.

Growing threats

In her committee testimony, Gavarone emphasized the escalating threats against election workers. She highlighted letters sent to officials in Washington, Oregon, Nevada, California, and Georgia with fentanyl in the envelope.

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'What a disgrace': CNN host rips into Rudy Giuliani for continuing to lie

Rudy Giuliani was buried Tuesday as he hit out at the two women who filed a second defamation case against him just days after a court ordered him to pay them damages of $148 million.

The former mayor of New York and ex-Donald Trump attorney was sued for a second time Monday by Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, who asked the court for "injunctive relief to permanently bar Defendant Rudolph W. Giuliani from persisting in his defamatory campaign."

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'Do the honorable thing': Clarence Thomas urged to recuse in Trump case

House Democrats on Monday called for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas to recuse himself from a pending case involving former President Donald Trump and the insurrection effort that took place on January 6, 2021.

A letter spearheaded by Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) and signed by seven other Democrats cites the participation of Thomas' wife, Ginni Thomas, in the far-right scheme to obstruct the certification of the 2020 election results, in which Trump was soundly defeated by President Joe Biden, as reason enough for the Thomas to recuse himself from a question before the court about the former's president immunity from prosecution.

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How the GOP's 'magic formula' for a bright future ended in a 'shambles': analyst

It was seen as the “magic formula,” a movement expected to transform the Republican Party and take it into a bright future.

But, just one year after it began, the GOP's Ron DeSantis-led Florida experiment has crashed and burned in spectacular fashion, Salon’s Amanda Marcotte wrote Tuesday.

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Five elections in 2024 that will shape the global order

Could Donald Trump make a comeback? Will anyone in Russia challenge another six years for Vladimir Putin?

With half the world heading to the polls in 2024, and some 30 countries electing a president, here are five key elections to watch:

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Michigan congresswoman with health and tech oversight bought stock in medical device giant

A Michigan congresswoman has purchased stock in a medical devices technology company while serving on House subcommittees with oversight on health and technology, according to a Raw Story analysis of federal financial records.

Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-MI) purchased on Dec. 5 between $15,001 and $50,000 worth of stock in Medtronic, one of the largest medical device companies with products used for a range of procedures and treatments from general surgery to cardiovascular to diabetes. Her 2022 annual report filed May 15 also noted $1,001 to $15,000 worth of Medtronic stock in a retirement account.

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New U.S. database tracks misconduct by law enforcement officers

The U.S. Justice Department announced the launch on Monday of a national database to document misconduct by federal law enforcement officers.

"This database will ensure that records of serious misconduct by federal law enforcement officers are readily available to agencies considering hiring those officers," President Joe Biden said in a statement.

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'Destroy him completely': Anti-Trump conservative begs Biden to get 'vicious'

Conservative Matt Lewis is begging someone in President Joe Biden's campaign to take the gloves off and start thrashing former President Donald Trump.

Writing in The Daily Beast, Lewis expressed alarm at Trump's recent rants about immigrants "poisoning the blood" of America and he blasted the Biden White House for responding with a mere press release.

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The top craziest things Trump supporters told Daily Show's Jordan Klepper in 2023

"Daily Show" correspondent Jordan Klepper has spent countless hours outside of Donald Trump rallies trying to help understand them better.

In his 2023 wrap-up video, Klepper showed the confusion at the Trump announcement as fans struggled to figure out if it was a rally or another sort of event.

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Giuliani's latest attacks on Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss could land him in jail: expert

Former President Donald Trump's longtime ally Rudy Giuliani, fresh off of his $148 million loss in the defamation case brought by poll workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, is continuing to push the same false claims. It opened him up to a second lawsuit at a moment when he is already drained of money from his legal fees.

But that could be the least of his worries, argued former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner on MSNBC's "The ReidOut" Monday evening — he could soon find himself re-arrested in the Georgia election racketeering case, as his ongoing attacks on Freeman and Moss also violates the terms of his pretrial release.

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Ron DeSantis lost in translation over Donald Trump's 'blood stuff'

Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) is lost in Trumpistan.

Former President Donald Trump's repeated refrain about illegal migrants "poisoning the blood" of the country has stumped the Florida governor hoping to earn the GOP nomination for president.

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Rudy Giuliani hit with second defamation lawsuit from former election workers

Former election workers Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman filed a second lawsuit against former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Just days after a jury ordered Giuliani to pay Moss and Freeman $148 million, the pair again asked the court to sanction him.

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'Destroy the whole house': MAGA fans say they're just fine with Trump's dictator comments

Attendees at Donald Trump's rallies over the weekend uniformly don't have any worries that he said he'd love to be a "dictator" for one day if he is reelected, with some claiming he's just taunting his critics — and others saying that the U.S. system of government needs a good housecleaning.

In interviews with USA Today's Riley Beggin, MAGA supporters were pressed to explain how they can stand behind the former president who, to other's eyes, is edging close to full-on authoritarianism, if his recent comments are taken seriously

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