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New chief judge in Washington to oversee secret Trump proceedings

By Jacqueline Thomsen

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A new judge takes over leadership of the U.S. trial court in Washington on Friday, inheriting oversight of secret proceedings involving special counsel criminal investigations into former President Donald Trump's retention of classified documents and efforts by him and his allies to undo his 2020 election loss.

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Trump is in big trouble with evangelicals in Florida

Intense support from the evangelical community was essential to former President Donald Trump's victory in the 2016 election.

But even as he gears up for a 2024 rematch with President Joe Biden, there are signs in Trump's adopted state of Florida that his agenda no longer holds as much sway with this key voting bloc, Religion News Service reported this week — and several of these worshipers are looking instead to Gov. Ron DeSantis.

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Watch: Trump announces plan to avert WW3 but goes off script in attack on neocons and Marxists

Donald Trump on Thursday announced plans to avert World War III, but the former president went off script to launch attacks on neocons and Marxists, among others.

“We have never been closer to World War III than we are today under Joe Biden, a global conflict between nuclear armed powers would mean death and destruction on the scale unmatched in human history. It would be nuclear Armageddon,” the former president said in a video he posted on his Truth Social website.

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'Everyone knows it’s a sham': Trump spokesman attacks 'Soros-backed' Manhattan prosecutor

Former President Donald Trump's spokesman released a statement on Thursday evening attacking Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg amid reports that he is likely to indict the former president soon.

"President Donald J. Trump is completely innocent, he did nothing wrong, and even the biggest, most Radical Left Democrats are making that clear," wrote Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung. "From Russia, Russia, Russia, to the Mueller Hoax, to Impeachment Hoaxes 1 and 2, and even the Unlawful Mar-a-Lago Raid, Democrats have investigated and attacked President Trump since before he was elected – and they’ve failed every time. Now Democrats are at it again, pushing the 'Nuclear Button' and attacking a President because of a disgraced extortionist. This is happening because President Trump is leading in the polls by a large margin against both Democrats and Republicans, and there’s never been anything so blatant in American political history."

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U.S. Senate moves toward repealing authority for military force against Iraq

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate took a broadly bipartisan vote Thursday to advance legislation that would end the 32-year-old and the 20-year-old Authorizations for Use of Military Force against Iraq.

The 68-27 vote moves the measure past the chamber’s 60-vote legislative filibuster and towards a final passage vote as soon as next week. House Republican leaders, some of whom have opposed repeal in the past, would then need to decide whether to bring the bill to the floor for a vote.

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Virginia lawmaker proposes felony charges for any member of Congress who writes gun laws

Marie March, a far-right Virginia delegate who attended former President Donald Trump's "Stop the Steal" rally, has a new idea, reported The Daily Beast on Thursday: prosecute members of Congress who write gun control laws.

"In a Wednesday email, first reported by Virginia political journalist Brandon Jarvis, March solicited funds from supporters who 'oppose Joe Biden and his anti-gun schemes,'" reported Kelly Weill. "If re-elected, March wrote, 'I will lead the effort to outlaw every single Federal Anti-Gun Edict or ‘rule change’ here in the Commonwealth of Virginia, and make it a felony to try to push these anti-gun schemes on law-abiding citizens.' It’s unclear how such legislation would possibly work, even in the unlikely event that it is enacted. Would U.S. senators who voted for gun laws be extradited to Virginia? March did not return a call or email request for clarification."

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Team Trump gears up to wage ‘political war’ as indictment looms: report

An indictment against Donald Trump is looming, and all indications are the former president’s campaign is readying to wage a “political war,” The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman reports.

All indications are pointing to a Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg Jr. indicting the former president within weeks, if not days, former Manhattan Chief Assistant District Attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo told The Daily Beast earlier this week.

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Warren goes off on Jerome Powell during Senate Finance hearing: He aimed a ‘flamethrower’ at banking rules

Elizabeth Warren on Thursday blamed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and lawmakers who enabled him for relaxing regulations that she said led to Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse last week.

The second-largest bank collapse in U.S. history prompted the U.S. government to protect all depositors, including those over the FDIC’s $250,000 limit.

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'Furious' Marjorie Taylor Greene demands GOP beats 'war drums' against Mexican cartels

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) on Thursday angrily demanded that her party start "beating the war drums" against Mexican drug cartels.

Appearing on Steve Bannon's "War Room" podcast, the Georgia congresswoman declared she was "furious" with members of Congress, including some Republicans, whom she accused of not paying enough attention to the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border.

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'Authoritarian' GOP candidates employ 'apocalyptic' rhetoric heading into 2024: analysis

A new analysis by the Washington Post has found that Republican presidential candidates, led by former President Donald Trump, are employing "dark" and "apocalyptic" rhetoric about the state of the nation heading into the 2024 campaign.

Among other things, the report cites statements by former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who claimed that "Joe Biden and the Democrats are destroying our people’s patriotism and swapping it out for dangerous self-loathing."

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GOP leaders' pandering to extremists has left the party in crisis: analysis

Republican leaders are regretting their years of allying with extremists who have slowly become the base voters of their party — and are stopping the party from nominating candidates capable of winning key elections, according to an analysis in The New Republic published on Thursday.

Following the 2022 midterm elections, Republicans engaged in soul-searching after a disappointing performance that saw them lose Senate seats, governors and state legislatures, and only barely retake the House. Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) told reporters that Trump's endorsement was a "kiss of death," while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said the GOP had a "candidate quality problem."

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Conservative warns GOP against 'delusions' about easily beating Biden

President Joe Biden isn't breaking records for presidential popularity, but conservative Rich Lowry argues in his latest Politico essay that it would be a mistake to think he'll be easy to beat in the 2024 election.

Even though Biden's approval rating is still stuck in the 44 percent range, Lowry notes that the president was in even worse shape politically in 2022, when Republicans suffered a significantly disappointing election result.

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Republican divide on Ukraine tees up 2024 showdown

A civil war over US military aid to Ukraine has erupted among Republicans, pitting foreign policy "hawks" against the isolationist right and setting the stage for the most consequential debate so far in the 2024 presidential election.

The fight over how much help to give the US ally in repelling Russia's invasion has intensified since presumed White House hopeful Ron DeSantis echoed a Kremlin talking point by likening the conflict to a "territorial dispute."

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