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'She wants me behind bars': Trump lashes out at Judge Chutkan after old Jan. 6-related quote resurfaces

Donald Trump tested a federal judge's boundaries by issuing a late-night attack drawn from a quote that circulated over the weekend on right-wing media websites.

The former president lashed out at U.S. District Court judge Tanya Chutkan, who is presiding over his case in the District of Columbia, and claimed she had already determined he belonged "behind bars" by citing her comments during the sentencing of a Jan. 6 rioter last year.

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Republicans on Capitol Hill fiddle while Americans broil or burn

WASHINGTON — It may be so hot out West that President Joe Biden recently forgot whether he had actually declared a national climate emergency (he hasn’t, officially).

But this summer’s record-breaking heat wave has nevertheless had Republicans at the Capitol deflecting and dodging all things climate change related.

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Republican senators ridiculed by MSNBC hosts for complaining about Garland doing exactly what they asked

Two MSNBC hosts couldn't help but laugh at Republicans for anger over Attorney General Merrick Garland agreeing to their demands.

This week, Garland agreed to GOP lawmakers who demanded that U.S. Attorney David Weiss be granted the same powers of a special counsel to investigate President Joe Biden's son, Hunter.

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RFK Jr. says he would sign abortion ban at 15 weeks — but still supports other 'medical freedom'

Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. indicated that he believes life begins at conception and said he opposes all abortions after 90 days.

“I believe a decision to abort a child should be up to the women during the first three months of life,” Kennedy told NBC News, referring to those three months as "life."

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'Maui is my home — you don't speak for me': Lauren Boebert slammed over Hawaii fires attack on Biden

Social media users slammed Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) over the far-right congresswoman’s suggestion that President Joe Biden isn’t giving adequate attention to the Maui fires.

Authorities on Sunday confirmed that the Lahaina, Hawaii blaze has killed 93 people and left at least 2,200 buildings damaged or destroyed, The Associated Press reports. The blaze has caused an estimated $6 billion in property damage.

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Jamie Raskin promises full report on the millions Trump and his family 'pocketed' while he was president

Appearing on ABC's "This Week" with host Jonathan Karl, Rep Jamie Raskin (D-MD) interrupted the host's questions about Hunter Biden's legal problems to announce a forthcoming report on all the outside money Donald Trump and his family raked in while he was in office.

With Karl asking about a special counsel being appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland to look into President Joe Biden's son's business deals, the Maryland Democrat changed things up by bringing up the Trumps.

“We’re going to release a report about all of the foreign government emoluments and millions of dollars we can document that Donald Trump pocketed at the hotels, at the golf courses and through business deals when he was president and that his family got," he told the ABC host.

He then added that attacks on President Biden have come up empty, explaining, "They haven’t shown any criminal corruption on his part."

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office.

"What they’ve got is Hunter Biden," he elaborated. "And we’ve all seen that this guy was addicted to drugs and did a lot of really unlawful and wrong things. And we have said: let the justice system run its course."

Turning to the avalanche of legal problems the former president is facing, including two federal indictments, he took a shot at his Republican colleagues.

"They’re not saying that about Donald Trump," he accused. "Any time Donald Trump actually gets indicted, after a grand jury has already determined that there’s probable cause, they attack the prosecutors, they attack the judges.”

Watch below or at the link.

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'Talk is cheap': Conservative buries Trump for having 'no plan' other than 'a rerun of his failed 2020 campaign'

A staunchly conservative columnist slammed Donald Trump in a sobering assessment of the former president and his continued preoccupation with baseless claims of election fraud in 2020.

Brady Leonard writes for The Washington Examiner that Trump is offering no new ideas for “What exactly would be different in a second matchup against President Joe Biden?”

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Georgia voting systems breach a 'top-down push by Trump’s team': report

Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis and her team of prosecutors have proof that allies of twice-impeached thrice-indicted former President Donald Trump "attempted to access voting systems after the 2020 election as part of the broader push to produce evidence that could back up the former president's baseless claims of widespread fraud," sources familiar with the investigation told CNN's Zachary Cohen and Sara Murray over the weekend.

Willis' office has collected "text messages and emails directly connecting members of Donald Trump's legal team to the early January 2021 voting system breach in Coffee County," Cohen and Murray wrote on Sunday. "Investigators in the Georgia criminal probe have long suspected the breach was not an organic effort sprung from sympathetic Trump supporters in rural and heavily Republican Coffee County – a county Trump won by nearly 70% of the vote. They have gathered evidence indicating it was a top-down push by Trump's team to access sensitive voting software, according to people familiar with the situation."

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Biden fights for political gain a year after ambitious climate law

Washington (AFP) - If he had it to do over, he would probably choose another name: A year on, Joe Biden is struggling to sell Americans on the benefits of the Inflation Reduction Act. The hugely ambitious project is aimed at speeding America's transition to clean energy, rebuilding its industrial might and increasing social justice. On August 16, 2022, when the US president signed the $750 billion plan into law, the country was in the midst of a dramatic surge in prices that was battering the Democratic leader's popularity.  So "the Inflation Reduction Act" seemed a logical name, even though t...

'Whiplash': Ex-GOP lawmaker dismantles Republicans' Hunter Biden messaging

Republicans are giving citizens understandable whiplash from their messaging in connection with Hunter Biden, former Rep. David Jolly (R-FL) said on MSNBC Saturday.

Jolly, who recently said voters are rejecting Republican extremism in record numbers, appeared on American Voices with Alicia Menendez where he was asked about the political ramifications of Republicans demanding a special counsel to investigate Hunter Biden, only to call the appointment of one a "sham."

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Trump snarls at having to divert 'vast amounts of money' from his campaign to pay his legal bills

Days after it was reported that Donald Trump's 2024 presidential campaign is facing a possible cash crunch before the GOP primaries commence because millions of dollars are being diverted to pay his increasing mountain of legal bills, the billionaire ex-president took to Truth Social to whine about his circumstances.

According to a report from the New York Times, "New financial reports show that the former president’s various political committees and the super PAC backing him have used roughly 30 cents of every dollar spent so far this year on legal-related costs. The total amounts to more than $27 million in legal fees and other investigation-related bills in the first six months of 2023."

The former president who has studiously avoided using his platform from attacking anything or anyone that has anything to do with his District of Columbia indictment after being warned by Judge Tanya Chutkan, took a roundabout way to complain about the Department of Justice.

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Newly released 'Co-Conspirator 5' memo handed Jack Smith key 'criminal scheme' details: legal experts

A newly released memo proposing 2020 presidential election alternate electors written by lawyer Kenneth Chesebro appears to have handed special counsel Jack Smith a detailed roadmap of acts that can be charged as part of a "criminal scheme" according to three noted legal scholars.

In a column for MSNBC, attorneys Fred Wertheimer, Joshua Kolb and Norm Eisen examined the memo from Chesebro, identified by Smith as "Co-Conspirator 5," and claimed his proposals to create slates of fake electors that mirror what happened and provide valuable evidence of a conspiracy.

As the three wrote, attorney Chesebro made his case for creating alternate slates of electors who would step in with the intent of handing the election to Trump over Joe Biden -- while also admitting that it would likely not stand up to legal scrutiny long after the deed was done.

In their column for MSNBC they wrote, "Now that we have the actual document, we can see precisely how the scheme evolved: from an earlier, perhaps legitimate effort to preserve Wisconsin electors for Trump based on genuine litigation into a nationwide sham," later adding, "In assessing the legality of what Chesebro and his associates were proposing, we should think of these fake electoral certificates the same way we would counterfeit money. What Chesebro, Trump, Eastman and the rest of the alleged conspirators wanted Pence to do seems equivalent to passing phony money."

RELATED: Trump lawyer dropped 'loser' argument after DC Judge Chutkan rolled her eyes and put 'her face in her hands'

Labeling it "a political strategy, cloaked in the garb of the law," they explained, "Ultimately, Chesebro’s memo highlights a theme of the Trump indictment: the corrupting of the legal profession in the service of one man, a coup attempt, and illicit political power."

Noting that there are now calls for Chesebro's disbarment, the attorneys pointed out, "Fundamentally, Jack Smith brought his indictment to uphold the rule of law. His case serves to counteract the allegedly lawless wreckage created, in part, by lawyers like Chesebro — who are officers of the court and swore an oath to protect the rule of law. The newly revealed memo exposes just how deep the corruption was."

You can read the entire op-ed here.

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