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Joe Biden

Chuck Todd to GOP candidate: 'It's remarkable how uncomfortable' you are bashing Trump

NBC host Chuck Todd called out Republican presidential candidate Doug Burgum after he appeared "uncomfortable" criticizing former President Donald Trump.

"You know, it's been interesting to me in a couple of interviews, plus in the one we've just had now, you've been quite comfortable bringing up Hunter Biden on Joe Biden," Todd opined. "But it's remarkable to me how uncomfortable you, and you're not alone here, you are bringing up the legal problems and the charges against Donald Trump."

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'Does that sound fair to anyone?' Trump whines about 'time and expense' of indictments

Donald Trump on Saturday complained about the cost, both in time and in money, that comes along with being criminally charged, asking his fans, "Does that sound fair to anyone?"

Trump, who is facing overlapping legal threats stemming from his alleged mishandling of documents, attempts to overturn the 2020 election, and more, took to his favorite platform --- his own Truth Social --- to air his grievances about the impact of indictments he claims are actually a "badge of honor and courage."

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'It’s slightly terrifying': European allies panicked by threat of a Trump re-election

The prospect that Donald Trump could make a return engagement in the Oval Office if he is re-elected in 2024 is not being lost on European diplomats who are expressing fears and making contingency plans should that occur.

According to a New York Times report, one diplomat called the idea of the return of unpredictable and abrasive Trump "terrifying."

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'Crazy-bread MAGA' voters won't be enough to save Trump: Dem strategist

During a panel discussion on CNN early Saturday morning, Democratic strategist Maria Cardona latched onto GOP strategist Alice Stewart's comparison between "crazy-bread" versus "milquetoast" voters who will dictate who will be the Republican presidential nominee in 2024.

Using the aforementioned "crazy-bread" voters who will vote for Donald Trump no matter how many times he is indicted as a reference point, Cardona said there is not enough of them to propel Trump back to the Oval Office.

Pointing out "what Joe Biden is putting on the floor, " she added, "The crazy-bread MAGA extremist agenda that is trying to take away women's rights, that is trying to ban books, trying to rewrite African-American history; that is not something that Americans want in the White House."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"They don't want the crazy-bread in the White House," she continued. "They had it for four years and I don't think you're going to see another independent voter or a suburban woman say, 'Oh, a fourth indictment? Now I'm going to be able to support crazy-bread Trump!' No, I don't think so."

"Frankly no other Republican is adding support right now among the voters that they needed, and I don't see how that's going to happen between now and the election," she concluded.

Watch below or at the link.

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Republicans recoil after Biden blocks funding for hunter education

A group of 19 Republican U.S. senators, including Louisiana’s John Kennedy, have complained to the Biden administration over its move to withhold money from public school archery and hunter education programs.

Last month, the U.S. Department of Education revealed the funding would be held back as dedicated under the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act of 2022, legislation the president touted as containing the most significant gun safety reforms in decades. The law broadened the definition of licensed gun dealers to require more of them undergo background checks, and it expanded access to mental health services and violence intervention programs.

Another part of the act amended the Elementary and Secondary Act (ESEA) of 1965 to prohibit federal funds from going toward “training in the use of a dangerous weapon.”

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Kellyanne Conway wants Nebraska Republicans to focus on 'winning over whining'

NORFOLK, Nebraska — Kellyanne Conway, a pollster and long-time adviser to former President Donald Trump, told a booster club of Nebraska Republicans on Friday that they should stop fighting one another over the 20% of policies they disagree on. Former Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway addresses a Nebraska Republican Party booster club Friday in Norfolk, Neb. (Aaron Sanderford/Nebraska Examiner)

Conway, whose former boss often throws elbows at the Republicans he disagrees with, said three years of Democrats running much of Washington, D.C., has clarified the value of GOP unity. She said that’s how to grow the party and not shrink it.

She emphasized “winning over whining” and said Republicans must stop ceding the early voting advantage to Democrats. She said candidates should focus on issues working people care about, including security, affordability, fairness and education.

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'Keep him busy': Trump speculates about reason for criminal charges in late-night post

Donald Trump late Friday night invented a fictional scenario in which Joe Biden ordered the investigation into the former president.

Trump, who is currently facing criminal charges in a variety of jurisdictions, will surrender to face the most recent charges next week. Trump has also recently vowed not to attend the debate for GOP contenders, according to news reports.

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Fake elector probe in Arizona has key Trump ally in crosshairs: report

A key Donald Trump ally in Arizona is feeling the heat as the state's criminal probe into a plot to overturn its 2020 election results kicks into high gear, Rolling Stone reports.

The Grand Canyon State's former GOP chair Kelli Ward is at the center of the investigation into fake electors that “was a core component of the then-president and his aligned lawyers’ plans to overturn his 2020 election defeat and stop the legitimate transfer of power to his Democratic successor Joe Biden," the report said.

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‘Act of open hostility’: Trump plans to team up with Tucker Carlson instead of attending GOP debate

Donald Trump is expected to team up with former top Fox News host Tucker Carlson instead of attending next week’s GOP presidential debate, furthering his battle with the right-wing cable channel.

Trump “plans to upstage the first Republican primary debate on Wednesday by sitting for an online interview with the former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, according to multiple people briefed on the matter,” The New York Times reports Friday. The paper calls the move “debate-night counterprogramming” that “would serve as an act of open hostility,” and “a major affront both to the Republican National Committee and to Fox News, which is hosting the event.”

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Will Joe Biden be Impeached?

Will President Joe Biden be impeached?

The answer: at this point, it's unlikely. Democrats say that any impeachment effort is at best, theater, given that Republicans don't have the votes for impeachment among their own caucus in the House and they certainly don't have 67 votes in the Senate, which would be required for conviction. (Senate Democrats were also unable to reach this threshold when impeaching former President Donald Trump.)

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These Iowa Republicans say they'll support 'perfect' Trump no matter what — 'until he dies'

Although Iowa isn't deep red like its neighbor to the west, Nebraska, the state has been a frequent source of frustration to Democrats. President Barack Obama won Iowa in both 2008 and 2012, but the state went to Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020. And Iowa is home to Religious Right-friendly Republicans such as Gov. Kim Reynolds and Sen. Joni Ernst.

With the 2024 Iowa Caucuses less than half a year away, The Bulwark's Joe Perticone visited the Iowa State Fair and surveyed the political landscape —which he describes in an article published on August 17. Perticone encountered some diehard Trump supporters as well as some conservative voters who were open to supporting other GOP presidential candidates.

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Why Trump indictments haven’t triggered another Jan. 6 — and why the worst may be yet to come

A grand jury handed up a 41-count indictment against Donald Trump and 18 alleged co-conspirators late Monday night inside a courthouse in Atlanta. Outside, law enforcement prepared for a Jan. 6-esque riot.

But as Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis announced her case against Trump, no right-wing MAGA supporters, equipped with tactical gear and assault rifles, descended on the courthouse.

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Michigan clerk faces demands for resignation after his indictment in 'fake electors' plot

Stanley Grot, the clerk of a suburban Detroit township who was among several “false electors” indicted last month for allegedly trying to subvert Michigan’s 2020 presidential vote, faced a harsh public reception Tuesday from several local residents calling for him to resign or face removal from his job, if even by a recall campaign.

Several people who spoke at the Shelby Township Board of Trustees’ meeting demanded that Grot step aside, saying he has “shamed” the township because of the eight-count indictment against him. The packed, civil audience of about 125 people at the township library was a far cry from the normal low-turnout proceedings, a member of the board noted.

Grot, whose job as clerk means he also sits on the board, was called out by some of his constituents on the state’s allegations that he was trying to help throw a presidential election.

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