Joe Biden

GOPer cut off by CNN host for anti-immigrant rant when asked about Gaza refugees

During an appearance on CNN on Sunday morning, host Victor Blackwell was forced to shut down a House Republican who took advantage of a question about what to do with Palestinian refugees to attack President Joe Biden over immigration in the U.S.

Discussing the evacuation of Gaza due to the assault on Israel by Hamas militants, Blackwell asked Rep. Bob Good (R-VA) how America can help.

Good immediately segued into criticizing Democrats and Biden.

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"Two questions here," the CNN host prompted. "Do you agree with the decision that there should be no Palestinians from Gaza coming to the U.S. and do you agree that every man, woman, and child, civilian there is an anti-semite?"

"Obviously, I couldn't possibly know the latter part of that question," Good replied. "I do agree with Governor [Ron] DeSantis. When you have 300,000 illegal aliens coming across our border from all countries around the world on a monthly basis right now, because of the Biden open border policies, when he let 7 million illegals in the country over the last two and a half years, a million and a half of those are criminal got-aways."

He later added, "We have done irreparable harm to the country. When they brought, what, 100,000 plus Afghanis evacuated in a week, with little-to-no vetting. I went and met with those at Fort Pickett [now known as Fort Barfoot] in my district, with thousands of them, most of whom were military-age men who did not speak English, and they were supposedly our translators ---."

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Trump v. Swift: Musician poised to raise political voice in 2024

LAWRENCE — Professional musician and novice Kansas City Chiefs enthusiast Taylor Swift avoided flexing her artistry on the political stage during the 2016 presidential contest between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.

A pair of Kansas college professors, who consider themselves Swifties, said the Grammy Award winner began to find her voice in 2018 while calling upon passionate fans to register to vote.

“I’ve heard criticism about her political silence before 2018, particularly her political silence during the 2016 election. I hear those concerns. I understand them,” said Brian Donovan, a University of Kansas sociology professor who has been working on a book about Swift. “If we put it in context, we should recognize that she came from a country music background that tilted more conservative. She saw what happened to the Dixie Chicks, now called the Chicks, when they spoke out about politics.”

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DeSantis in Iowa: I won’t let Gaza refugees into the U.S.

CRESTON — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis emphasized his national security policies on the campaign trail in Iowa Saturday while ramping up investments in the first-in-the-nation caucus state.

DeSantis started off his first of six stops Saturday in Creston, where he told Iowans that the U.S. needs to do more to protect Americans and Israelis as violence escalates between the Middle Eastern state and Hamas, the Palestinian group currently in control of Gaza.

DeSantis said media and international organizations like the United Nations will start to criticize Israel for its actions in Gaza. Israel ordered the evacuation for the northern half of Gaza, where roughly 1 million people live.

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'Through weakness you get war': Trump makes vague threat in attack on Biden administration

Taking to his Truth Social platform on Sunday morning, former president Donald Trump posted a cryptic message that seems to imply a threat against President Joe Biden's administration.

Without providing any context for what set the former president off, he began by writing, "Through weakness you get war."

That was followed with Trump once again complaining that the multiple criminal indictments he is facing are part of a plot to keep him from being reelected in 2024.

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"The Biden Administration is the weakest and most incompetent in the history of the U.S., except when using corrupt law enforcement to attack your Political Opponent - But actually, that’s weakness also!" he wrote.

Advocates slam Kari Lake's 'blatant lies'

Kari Lake, who has been staunchly anti-abortion since she entered the political fray in 2021, says that pro-choice advocates only offer one choice — abortion — and that many women who undergo the procedure end up deeply regretting it.

But actual pro-choice advocates say that her assertions are far from true, and studies show that the vast majority of women still feel their abortions were the right decision five years later.

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'A bigger deal than the usual screw up': Trump put on notice over his Israel blunder

Donald Trump has recently been in damage-control mode over his comments in opposition to Israeli's leader following the devastating terrorist attacks on our Middle-East ally, and now a Republican consultant has used the former president's blunder as evidence that he is not America First - but Trump first.

Trump lashed out at a rally last week against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, essentially accusing him of chickening out at the last minute on the mission to take out Iranian general Qassim Suleimani. Netanyahu was a close political ally of Trump while he was in office, but Trump reportedly felt spurned when Netanyahu acknowledged Joe Biden's victory in 2020.

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We'll do 'everything in our power' to free captive Americans: Biden

US President Joe Biden vowed in an interview broadcast Friday to do "everything in our power" to free Americans taken hostage by Hamas.

Biden also spoke with families of 14 Americans still missing after the Palestinian militant group attacked Israel six days ago, taking dozens of hostages and triggering a bloody conflict.

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'What a shame': Trump invites followers to ponder why he's being prosecuted

In a post to Truth Social this Friday, former President Donald Trump suggested that the alleged unfair treatment he's receiving from prosecutors is distracting from problems at home and abroad.

Trump, who has recently been using his social media posts to state his support for Israel following backlash against some of his comments aimed at the nation's leader, decided to ponder why he's being charged with crimes.

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This hotly debated Supreme Court case could be Democrats' key to flipping the House

The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday heard arguments in Alexander v. South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP — a case dealing with gerrymandering in that southern state.

While neighboring North Carolina is a swing state that President Joe Biden lost by only about 1 percent in 2020, South Carolina is much more of a red state. But South Carolina has its Democrat-friendly areas, and Democrats have been arguing that gerrymandering of the state's U.S. House districts gives Republicans an unfair advantage — including Rep. Nancy Mace (R-South Carolina).

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Trump blasted for wanting Israel to spurn Biden for 'private citizen' with 'legal trouble'

Donald Trump's recent speech in the wake of Hamas' terror attack against Israel – in which where he praised Hezbollah as "very smart" – has riled both Republicans and Democrats alike.

According to The Atlantic's David A. Graham, Trump's comments have prompted some to ask if he's pro-Israel or anti-Israel -- but he wrote, that question misses the point.

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'It's personal': White House rocked by Israel attack

The Hamas attack on key US ally Israel has caused emotions to run high in a place better known for the steely exercise of power -- the White House.

President Joe Biden has given several strongly worded speeches pledging support for Israel since Saturday's assault by the Palestinian militant group, and at one point pounded on a lectern to make his point.

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U.S attorney shoots down IRS whistleblower claims he ran interference for Hunter Biden

A top Department of Justice official who has been accused of blocking an investigation into Hunter Biden, the son of President Joe Biden, shot down the claims in an interview with investigators last week.

According to a report from CNN, U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves shot down accusations from so-called IRS whistleblowers who have been at the center of a Republican House members' investigation as they try to turn the president's troubled son into a political liability in the 2024 presidential election.

As CNN's Annie Grayer and Marshall Cohen report, Graves "said in his private deposition last week that even though his office declined to formally partner up on the case, he did offer logistical support to David Weiss, the federal prosecutor leading the Hunter Biden probe. Graves affirmed in his testimony that he never did anything to stop Weiss from pursuing charges in DC on his own."

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The report adds that Graves' testimony "undercuts" assertions made by Gary Shapley and Joseph Ziegler who claimed they witnessed interference while with the IRS.

According to a transcript of Graves' testimony, he told investigators, "It was just assumed that, from the moment I got on the call, he was gonna be able to do whatever he needed to do in our jurisdiction to bring the case, if that was his prerogative.”

CNN is reporting, "Career prosecutors from Graves' office then conferred with Weiss’ team and looked into setting Weiss up with a DC-based federal grand jury where he could seek an indictment against the president’s son, according to his testimony. Graves’ team later decided they didn’t want to jointly prosecute the case in DC, but that they would continue 'to provide all assistance that was necessary for (Weiss) to do whatever they wanted to do in our jurisdiction,' Graves told the House Judiciary Committee."

You can read more here.

Unused government election fund brings in another $1.3 million

A largely unused government fund intended to pay for presidential elections continues to grow with monthly taxpayer infusions — adding more than $1.3 million between July 1 and Sept. 30 — but it also recently provided more than $47 million to fund pediatric research, according to a Raw Story analysis of U.S. Treasury records.

The Presidential Election Campaign Fund has accumulated just shy of $400 million in taxpayer-funded money as of Sept. 30 — funds that will likely continue to sit in a bureaucratic black hole for years, Treasury records show. The fund ballooned to more than $445.6 million as of June 30, but a disbursement to the National Institutes of Health of money formerly used to put on party conventions decreased the pool of idle dollars.

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