Joe Biden

Fake Arizona electors face 'increased legal liability' over their 'unusually vocal' effort

A "robust" state investigation into the Arizona GOP activists who declared themselves fake electors for former President Donald Trump in 2020 is fully underway, reported CNN's KFILE on Friday.

"They broadcast themselves preparing to sign the documents, allegedly provided by a Trump campaign attorney, claiming that they were the legitimate representatives of the state’s electoral votes," reported Andrew Kaczynski, Em Steck and, Kyung Lah. "By that time, Trump’s loss in the state – by less than 11,000 votes – had already been certified by the state’s Republican governor affirming that Joe Biden won Arizona in the 2020 presidential election."

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'We're not there yet': Republicans question the need to impeach Biden as polling droops

The House impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden was sidelined during the 22-day scramble to elect a new speaker, but Republican lawmakers are moving forward – although many of them publicly questioned the evidence turned up so far.

House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) has urged GOP lawmakers to conduct a thorough and fair investigation, and he indicated to Republican moderates this week in a closed-door meeting that there was not yet sufficient evidence to initiate formal impeachment proceedings, sources who attended the gathering told the Washington Post.

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Trump flips out on Jack Smith over 'leaked' Mar-a-Lago employee witness report

On Friday morning, Donald Trump lashed out at special counsel Jack Smith, claiming the Department of Justice prosecutor leaked a report about Mar-a-Lago employees providing evidence of stolen documents seen at their place of work.

As CNN reported, " A plumber, a maid, a chauffeur and a woodworker are among Mar-a-Lago staffers and contract workers who federal prosecutors may call to testify against former President Donald Trump."

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Trump's new campaign has all the signs of a 'nervous breakdown': Bob Woodward

Reacting to MSNBC host Joe Scarborough hammering Donald Trump for his earlier praise of terrorist organization Hezbollah as Israel came under attack by Hamas, journalist and author Bob Woodward claimed he has viewed the former president's time in office — and after — as a series of "nervous breakdowns."

During an appearance on "Morning Joe," prior to giving his views on how President Joe Biden and his administration have handled the crisis in the Middle East, Woodward felt the need to address Trump's third run for the presidency.

"First of all, Trump," he began. "I've spent seven years on Trump and I have been thinking about the work and what I discovered, and I realized in his time as president, is a series of nervous breakdowns."

"And to call it a breakdown doesn't do it full justice," he added. "It's also clear that his campaign now is also another nervous breakdown, and you can't do it any other way."

Watch the video below or at this link.

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'Donald Trump's worst nightmare' still awaits him: Joe Scarborough

Reflecting on the election results from Wednesday when Ohio voters added abortion rights to the state constitution, "Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough claimed it will cast a a dark cloud over Donald Trump's third presidential run.

Noting the number of conservative-controlled states where voters have also affirmed a woman's right to make personal healthcare decisions for themselves without government interference, the MSNBC host called it "Donald Trump's worst nightmare."

In particular, he noted Trump's repeated boasts about "terminating" the right to an abortion after placing three conservative justices on the Supreme Court — all of whom voted to overturn Roe v. Wade.

"I think Joe Biden touched on that's going to really give us insight on what we're going to see the next year," the MSNBC host told his panel, "and certainly going to be Donald Trump's worst nightmare. One is abortion. Donald Trump: I killed abortion. I killed Roe v. Wade. I'm the one that made sure Roe v. Wade ended."

"He's been saying it nonstop, and this lie that somehow now he's trying to tack to the middle, only in front of certain audiences. He's still saying it out there, and it's on tape so much," he continued. "I think -- I think it's going to be like a fighter in the middle of the ring and I think they're going to keep going to the body with it and keep pounding people talking about the fact that Donald Trump's proud of the fact that he's the guy responsible for 10-year-old girls having to flee the state of Ohio after they were raped by an illegal immigrant."

"That's happened across America, and women have been facing horrific health care choices, bleeding out with doctors going, 'We can't do anything,'" he added.

"Why can't they do anything? Why can't they take care of women who are bleeding out, who need help?" he asked rhetorically. "Because of Donald Trump — and Donald Trump's admitted it."

Watch the video below or at this link.

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'That's insane': CNN panel horrified after watching latest Trump interview

CNN host Phil Mattingly found himself unnerved after watching the latest interview of former President Donald Trump.

While discussing the former president's interview with Univision, in which he vowed to use the United States Department of Justice to arrest and indict multiple political opponents, Mattingly emphasized that he didn't think that anyone should believe Trump was merely speaking off the cuff.

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'Still confused' GOP remains in disarray as another shutdown looms

House Republicans are squabbling over a funding measure with a government shutdown looming next week – the same situation Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) found himself just before he was ousted as speaker.

New House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) finds himself with the same problem as his predecessor, but it seems unlikely he'll be able to wave a magic wand and solve disagreements within the GOP caucus over spending levels or craft a bill that a Democratic Senate or President Joe Biden would sign off on, reported The Daily Beast.

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Rep. Joaquin Castro warns of GOP’s adversarial rhetoric around Latino immigrants

WASHINGTON — As Republican candidates made their pitches for the White House on the debate stage Wednesday night, almost all supported responding to the situation on the border with a military response.

Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said she would send special operations into Mexico to “take out the cartels.” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said “we’re going to shoot them stone-cold dead.” Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy said he would be “smoking the terrorists on our southern border.”

To U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, it’s a culmination of years of adversarial stances against Latinos and Latin American migrants, from “build the wall” to “invade Mexico”.

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‘Helped put 5 million children back into poverty’: Some Democrats happy with Manchin exit

U.S. Senator Joe Manchin's announcement Thursday afternoon he will not run for re-election but instead will travel the country to “mobilize the middle and bring Americans together” is being seen by some as confirmation he will run for president as a third-party candidate, but some Democrats are thrilled he will be out of the Senate.

The West Virginia Democrat, one of the most-vulnerable and most unpopular in the Senate, has often been a challenge for Democrats for years.

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Trump-loving dirty tricksters have their day at Michigan Supreme Court

Two far-right operatives who made tens of thousands of calls spreading misinformation about voting across Midwestern states ahead of the 2020 presidential election, had oral arguments taken Thursday in their robocall voter intimidation criminal case in the Michigan Supreme Court.

Investigators who have looked into calls made in Michigan, Ohio and New York estimate that Jack Burkman and Jacob Wohl, who both have a history of manufacturing conservative conspiracy theories, made about 85,000 robocalls with false information about voting in an attempt to keep people from participating in the 2020 election in which Republican former President Donald Trump lost to Democratic President Joe Biden.

BREAKING: FCC proposes $5M fine for Wohl, Burkman over Michigan election robocall

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Biden visits Illinois, to celebrate UAW victory

BELVIDERE, Ill. — President Joe Biden came to Belvidere on Thursday to celebrate the restarting of the idled Stellantis plant and tout his role in supporting the United Auto Workers, whose strike negotiations made it possible. In a speech before a jubilant crowd of union autoworkers at the Boone County community center, Biden, who became the first sitting president to join a picket line last month in Michigan, donned a red UAW/Belvidere T-shirt in a show of solidarity before delivering his address. “The Belvidere Assembly Plant was the beating heart of this community for nearly six decades, ju...

'I don’t kiss and tell': CNN host presses ex-Trump lawyer on whether he was fired

The attorney won't divulge the goods.

Jim Trusty, who served as one of the former president's lawyers in the criminal case where the federal government is accusing him of hoarding classified documents in various rooms at his Mar-a-Lago club, refused to say whether he resigned or if Trump fired him.

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VP Harris hints that she’s heading to South Carolina Friday. Here’s why she’ll likely be in Columbia

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Vice President Kamala Harris appears to be traveling to Columbia Friday to accompany Congressman Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., as he files paperwork for President Joe Biden to appear on the South Carolina Democratic Party presidential primary ballot. Full details of the visit have yet to be confirmed, but Clyburn is scheduled to file Biden’s paperwork at 10 a.m. Thursday evening, Harris posted on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, “South Carolina Democrats are the backbone of the Democratic Party. Jim Clyburn, got room for one more?” The South Carolina primary is particularly m...