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Donald Trump Jr. and other Trump allies pivot indictment news to Biden criticism

Donald Trump Jr. and other top associates of Donald Trump are using news of the former president's federal indictment in the documents case to bring up recent allegations made against Joe Biden.

While some Democrats have questioned whether the allegations of Biden accepting a bribe were made to distract attention away from the senior Trump's own legal troubles, his son had a different theory after news of the indictment broke.

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The main legal troubles facing Donald Trump

X (Reuters) - Here is a list of additional legal troubles facing former President Donald Trump, who wrote on social media on Thursday that he has been indicted by the U.S. Department of Justice, apparently for mishandling sensitive government documents. He denies any wrongdoing.

2020 ELECTION AND THE U.S. CAPITOL ATTACK

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The investigation into Trump's classified documents: A timeline

Former President Donald Trump was indicted on federal charges that he stored classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago home and obstructed attempts from the National Archives to recover them.

Here's how the investigation unfolded:

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Trump says on Truth Social that DOJ has told him he is indicted in docs case

On Thursday, former President Donald Trump announced on his Truth Social platform that the Justice Department has informed his attorneys that he has been indicted in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case.

As of now, there is no independent confirmation from the Justice Department or the office of special counsel Jack Smith.

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Trump thinks using exclamation points and capital letters reduces 'legal jeopardy he faces': reporter

Politico reporter Betsy Woodruff Swan quipped on Thursday that former President Donald Trump appears to be deploying the strategy of innocence through attacks on social media.

Speaking on a panel with former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman and former FBI agent Peter Strzok, MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace asked if it was possible that Trump has already been indicted and it simply isn't public yet.

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State Republicans have introduced nearly 200 'election subversion' bills this year

Republican legislators in more than three dozen states have introduced nearly 200 bills this year that would make it easier for them to rig electoral outcomes, according to a report published Thursday.

A Democracy Crisis in the Making—compiled by the States United Democracy Center, Protect Democracy, and Law Forward—found that right-wing lawmakers in 38 states unveiled 185 bills from January 1 through May 3 that would enable legislatures to "politicize, criminalize, or interfere with elections." Of those proposals, 15 were enacted or adopted into law in 11 states while three others were vetoed by Arizona's new Democratic governor, Katie Hobbs.

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Alabama electoral map discriminated against Black voters: court

The US Supreme Court ruled that a congressional electoral map drawn in the southern state of Alabama discriminated against Black voters

Washington (AFP) - The US Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that a congressional electoral map drawn in the southern state of Alabama discriminated against Black voters.

The 5-4 decision by the conservative-majority court is a surprise victory for the Voting Rights Act, which was passed by Congress during the civil rights movement in 1965 to prevent racial discrimination against minorities in elections.

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'So damning': GOP lawmakers speak after reading FBI document they say proves Biden bribe

Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Lauren Boebert (R-CO) claim an internal FBI document shows President Joe Biden accepted a bribe.

House Republicans have been demanding access to an FD-1023 form they believe proves corruption allegations against the president and his son, and the two lawmakers were allowed to view the document in a secure location inside the U.S. Capitol Thursday – and they then briefed reporters on its contents.

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The bipartisan debt deal has broken the Republican House: reporter

Fringe members of the House Republican conference were so furious with Speaker Kevin McCarthy that they now consider it payback time, New York Magazine's Ben Jacobs wrote Thursday.

This week, Republicans rebelled.

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Marianne Williamson’s new campaign manager was once 'accused of financial fraud': report

A lot could happen between now and next year, but so far, the 2024 presidential race is shaping up to a rematch between incumbent President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump.

Although Trump has at least nine Republican challengers, he remains the clear GOP frontrunner. And Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — hailed by right-wing firebrand author Ann Coulter and other supporters as the GOP's best chance to move on from Trump — has yet to inflict any real damage on Trump's campaign. A Morning Consult poll released on June 6 showed Trump leading DeSantis by 34 percent among GOP primary voters.

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Gargantuan Pentagon budget puts 'special interests over the national interest': reports

Two separate reports published Thursday reach similar conclusions about the United States' sprawling and ever-growing military budget: It is not making the country or the world any safer, it is far too amenable to corporate lobbying, and it is drawing funding away from healthcare, clean energy, education, and other critical public goods.

The new reports from the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and Brown University's Costs of War Project come after President Joe Biden and House Republican leaders agreed to a military budget topline of $886 billion for fiscal year 2024—a level that war hawks in both parties are already working to increase.

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Biden names coordinator to work on book bans issue

The graphic novel

Washington (AFP) - US President Joe Biden has named a government coordinator to handle the thorny issue of book bans in schools -- one of a series of initiatives announced Thursday by the White House to support the LGBTQ community during Pride Month.

"Across the country, our nation faces a spike in book bans -- efforts that disproportionately strip books about LGBTQI+ communities, communities of color, and other communities off of library and classroom shelves," the White House said.

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Trump knew how to use 'declassifying tools' as president: former White House official

A former White House official told investigators that Donald Trump knew how to properly declassify material as president and used that process while in office.

The former official was in charge of advising both the Trump and Obama administrations on the declassification process, and is the only witness known to have been interviewed by the respective teams of prosecutors investigating Trump and President Joe Biden's handling of classified materials, reported CNN.

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