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Hunter Biden prosecutor tells Congress he’s decider in controversial case

The prosecutor leading the investigation into Hunter Biden told Congress Tuesday that he’s always been “the decider” in the controversial probe of the troubled presidential son. Special counsel David Weiss insisted that he has made all key decisions in the Hunter Biden case, rebutting Republican claims that the White House has influenced the probe to go easy on President Biden’s only surviving son. “I am, and have been, the decision-maker on this case,” Weiss said in the closed-door hearing. “I do not, however, make these decisions in a vacuum. I am bound by federal law, the principles of fede...

Hunter Biden prosecutor faced no political pressure in probe, he tells lawmakers

By Makini Brice and Andrew Goudsward WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Special Counsel David Weiss, who is leading the probe into President Joe Biden's son Hunter Biden, told the Republican-led House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday that he faced no political interference in a nearly seven-hour interview, contradicting earlier whistleblower testimony. Weiss has charged Hunter Biden, 53, with crimes related to owning a firearm while using illegal drugs. The president's son has said he struggled with addictions to alcohol and crack cocaine. House Republicans allege the Justice Department improperly inter...

Lawmaker whacks GOP for pushing 'misleading reports' on Hunter Biden prosecutor testimony

Rep. Dan Goldman (D-NY) left a House Judiciary Committee hearing with special counsel David Weiss and claimed that no one should believe any "misleading reports" from his Republican colleagues about what unfolded.

Weiss was being questioned behind closed doors about his ongoing investigation into President Joe Biden's son Hunter, whom Republicans have targeted since the 2020 election.

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Top Obama adviser backs off suggestion that Biden drop out

Political commentator and former top Obama adviser David Axelrod is walking back comments he made yesterday where he suggest that Joe Biden should drop out of the 2024 race, Politico reported.

“It’s overreacting to say I told him to drop out,” said Axelrod. “I didn’t do that.”

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Jewish New Yorkers occupy Statue of Liberty to demand Gaza ceasefire

Hundreds of US Jewish activists peacefully occupied New York's Statue of Liberty on Monday to demand a ceasefire by Israel and an end to the "genocidal bombardment" of civilians in Gaza.

Dressed in black T-shirts emblazoned with the slogans "Jews demand ceasefire now" or "Not in our name," the protestors unfurled banners reading "The whole world is watching" and "Palestinians should be free" at the base of New York's iconic landmark.

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OpenAI sees a future of AI 'superpowers on demand'

ChatGPT maker OpenAI on Monday moved to entice developers with lower prices and the ability to easily tailor artificial intelligence "agents" to help with anything from laundry advice to contract negotiations.

Dreams of the benefits of generative AI -- along with fears of the technology's risks -- have been hot topics in the tech world since ChatGPT made its blockbuster debut a year ago.

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Broad push, narrow achievements from U.S. on Gaza war

One month into the Israel-Hamas war, the achievements of US-led diplomacy have been small or subtle, but both supporters and critics say that is partly by design.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, completing his second whirlwind crisis tour, insisted that all leaders he spoke to wanted "American leadership."

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Republicans who have spent years lying about 'rigged' elections now need your vote to win

She told you the 2020 election was rigged. She claimed that thousands of “illegal ballots” counted in 2022 meant that your vote didn’t matter.

And now she wants you to vote for her in 2024.

Kari Lake, the leading Republican candidate for U.S. senator from Arizona, spent the last year fighting unsuccessful court battles to overturn her 17,000-vote loss in the 2022 governor’s race to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs. Lake spent much of that campaign as a leading purveyor of the “Big Lie” that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from Donald Trump, who showered her with praise in 2022 and has now endorsed her Senate bid.

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Rachel Maddow points to poll numbers being ignored amid Biden 2024 freakout

MSNBC's Rachel Maddow highlighted some significant poll results that spell big warning signs for Republicans on her Monday night show.

This comes despite a recent poll from The New York Times and Siena College that appeared to show former President Donald Trump surging over President Joe Biden in a handful of key battleground states. While Trump may have good numbers now, progressive policies are far more successful.

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UT Gov. Cox's campaign HQ vandalized — and person of interest arrested in 'mental episode'

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox's campaign headquarters was vandalized on Sunday night, and a person of interest experiencing a mental issue was reportedly involuntarily committed and being questioned relating to the incident.

“Rough morning for our team and campaign headquarters,” Cox wrote on a Twitter/X post, captioning images of shattered glass and caution tape over the front door.

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Financial backers of Biden's primary challenger ask him to return their donations

Minnesota Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips is lacking support for his primary bid against President Joe Biden from power brokers in his state who have donated to him in the past, CNBC reported.

Phillips has reportedly been asked by some of his former financial backers to return their donations.

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'He wants revenge': WaPo reporter reveals dark threat of another Trump presidency

Donald Trump is plotting a vengeance campaign if he's re-elected to another term as president, and a Washington Post reporter explained how he's surrounding himself with authoritarian accomplices.

The former president has publicly threatened to prosecute President Joe Biden and has privately told others that he wants the Justice Department to target his political enemies, and journalist Isaac Arnsdorf told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" how Trump intends to start a potential second term.

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'I can’t elect a criminal': A Trump conviction could cripple his re-election

While new polls over the weekend show President Joe Biden struggling against presumptive Republican Party 2024 presidential nominee Donald Trump, a deeper dive into the numbers demonstrates the former president's odds of winning would take a huge hit if he is convicted in one of his multitude of criminal trials.

According to reporting from the New York Times, for voters who are wavering between the two leading candidates a Trump criminal conviction would have a major impact on their vote.

What should be concerning for Trump, besides the prospect of ending up in jail, is that voters in key states who responded to those polls would drop him like a hot rock after a conviction.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

The Times is reporting Trump, "... remains weaker than at least one of his Republican rivals, and if he’s convicted and sentenced in any of his cases, some voters appear ready to turn on him — to the point where he could lose the 2024 election."

At issue are potential voter flips in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, where polling shows about 6 percent of Trump's support would wither away if takes a loss in criminal court.

The sea change would cost him the election, with one Republican voter, Kurt Wallach, 62 of Maricopa County telling the Times, "If he got convicted, I’d say great, put him out of the race, let’s get another Republican. If he’s not been convicted then I’d probably vote for Trump.”

Dakota Jordan, 26, also of Maricopa County agreed, explaining, "If he was convicted, there’s absolutely no way — I can’t elect a criminal as my leader."

The Times report also notes, "Mr. Trump remains broadly unpopular."

"A majority of swing state voters view him negatively. And the Times/Siena polls show that another Republican candidate, the former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley, would outperform Mr. Trump against Mr. Biden by 3 percentage points in these six states," the report states. "In a matchup that pits Mr. Biden against a generic Republican candidate, the Republican candidate wins by 16 percentage points."

You can read more here.