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Mike Pence just gave both Biden and Trump a gift

The new discovery that former Vice President Mike Pence had classified materials at his personal residence took some of the political pressure off President Joe Biden — and it also may have made it easier for former President Donald Trump, facing a much more serious classified documents scandal than either, to obfuscate his own wrongdoing, wrote Stephen Collinson for CNN on Wednesday.

"The discovery of classified documents in Pence’s home in Indiana, as first reported by CNN Tuesday, took the heat off Biden’s struggles to explain his possession of such material from his own vice presidency. And it made Pence the most popular man in the White House Tuesday. For one thing, the rumbling saga of secret documents had a new front man," wrote Collinson. "This was a huge embarrassment for Pence, exposing him to mockery and accusations of hypocrisy since he’d claimed moral high ground over Biden when the president was under fire for keeping documents and the Indiana Republican said he didn’t have any."

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New clip captures Ted Cruz falling flat with blatant contradictions in just 30 seconds

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) latest remarks highlighted his double standard regarding President Joe Biden and former Vice President Mike Pence.

Although both have been found to have classified documents in either their private homes or offices, Cruz only believes one of them should be investigated: Biden.

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'If you see Mike Pence — hang him!' Morning Joe mocks Trump's defense of ex-veep

Donald Trump issued a defense of Mike Pence after classified documents were found at his Indiana home, and MSNBC's Joe Scarborough laughed it off.

An attorney for the former vice president searched Pence's private residence after searches turned up several batches of classified materials at President Joe Biden's home and former office, and then alerted the Department of Justice and Congress, which will each conduct investigations, and Trump rushed to his defense.

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When were Pence classified documents found in his Indiana home?

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Mike Pence found documents marked classified at his Indiana home this month which were taken by the FBI, a lawyer for the former Vice President said in letters to the National Archives.

Here's how the situation unfolded, according to the letters:

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Republican hardliners, George Santos shun White House welcome for new Congress

By Trevor Hunnicutt

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Embattled Republican freshman U.S. Representative George Santos skipped his invitation to a White House reception on Tuesday evening and appears to have been joined by several hardline newcomers in snubbing President Joe Biden.

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Grief grips Asian Americans after California mass shootings

FBI agents investigate the crime scene after a shooting in Half Moon Bay, California, January 24, 2023

Monterey Park (United States) (AFP) - Asian Americans were reeling Tuesday after two mass shootings in California targeting members of their community left 18 people dead -- with the alleged gunmen in both cases being older men of Asian descent.

The killings came in a span of just 48 hours -- so close together that California Governor Gavin Newsom was at a hospital meeting with victims of the first attack when he was pulled away to be briefed about the second.

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Kevin McCarthy: I oppose my party's tax plan that I'm bringing up for a committee vote

Under the terms of the deal that got him confirmed, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) agreed to advance "FairTax" — a 30-year-old proposal to entirely abolish the IRS and replace it with a 30 percent tax on all retail sales and spending.

But that doesn't mean McCarthy is on board with the proposal. In a conversation with CNN congressional reporter Manu Raju on Tuesday, asked if he supported the plan, he simply replied, "No."

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'Judas Pence': Bannon lashes out at former VP — accuses him of providing cover for Biden

As Republican party loyalists are enjoying the afterglow of classified documents being found belonging to President Joe Biden, while minimizing the classified documents that have been found at the Indiana home of former Vice President Mike Pence, Steve Bannon longtime adviser, supporter and confidant of former President Donald Trump, has used the opportunity to knock Pence off his GOP platform for a possible 2024 presidential campaign.

On Bannon's Gettr social media account, he reacted to the news of Pence's classified documents.

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'Monumentally stupid': Reagan adviser shreds GOP over IRS plan

One of the conditions House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) agreed to under the terms of getting a group of far-right holdout lawmakers to stop blocking his election was to hold a serious House vote, for the first time ever, on a proposal known as "FairTax."

An idea that has been kicking around in libertarian circles for decades, FairTax calls for the IRS and all current forms of federal taxation to be abolished and replaced with a 30 percent tax on spending that would apply to everything from retail sales to real estate to anything involving a good or service being paid for. It would also establish what supporters call a "prebate," sending a monthly check to every household that covers the average amount a household would pay in tax for bare essentials like food and medicine.

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Trump’s legal team thinks Pence having documents changes everything: report

CNN's national security reporter, Zachary Cohen, spoke to former President Donald Trump's legal team after the news broke that Mike Pence had classified documents in his Indiana home. According to the lawyers, it changes everything.

It was announced on Tuesday that unknown to Pence, among the items taken from his time in the White House were a few documents that were marked classified. Pence, like President Joe Biden, immediately contacted the FBI and handed over the information.

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Having classified docs is more frequent than you might think — what Trump did was not: ex-FBI agent

Former FBI agent Peter Strzok penned a post to his Substack this week explaining to Americans that accidentally misplacing classified information is more frequent than one might assume.

In the wake of revelations that Donald Trump possessed over 13,000 documents, some of which were classified, former White House staffers were quick to say that were they to do something like that they'd be thrown in jail. In some ways they were correct. What Trump did by refusing to hand things over and making it clear that he took the documents intentionally would certainly cause trouble for any lower-level staffer.

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Justice Department sues Google over dominance of online ad market

The US Justice Department sued Google on Tuesday for its dominance of the online advertising market, launching a fresh legal battle against the California-based tech giant.

The federal antitrust suit accused Google of unlawfully maintaining a monopoly that had "corrupted legitimate competition in the ad tech industry".

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'They want to kill grandma': Dems support Biden's refusal to compromise Social Security for debt ceiling

WASHINGTON — Democratic Senators speaking to Raw Story made it clear that they're on board with President Joe Biden's refusal to negotiate with Republicans on the debt ceiling.

"It really holds Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid hostage," Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) said. "Over in the House they said they were going to balance the budget in ten years, and yet they're spending more money letting the wealthy tax cheats off the hook. It puts more pressure on Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid."

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