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'So good to be home:' Griner speaks out after release from Russia

US basketball star Brittney Griner said Friday in her first remarks since being released from a Russian prison that it was "so good to be home" and vowed to play again for the WNBA's Phoenix Mercury.

Griner, in a message on Instagram, thanked a long list of people for securing her release with a "special thank you" to President Joe Biden.

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Madison Cawthorn sued by his own lawyers for skipping out on nearly $200,000 in fees

According to WLOS, outgoing Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) is being sued by his own attorneys for a nearly $200,000 unpaid legal bill.

"The Bopp Law Firm said the outgoing congressman failed to pay up in a lawsuit challenging his qualifications to seek re-election," said the report. "Earlier this year, Cawthorn sued North Carolina to stop the State Board of Elections from considering removing the U.S. representative's name from the ballot for reelection in North Carolina’s 11th Congressional District."

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Climate defenders celebrate as Manchin's dirty deal defeated a third time

The U.S. climate movement and people on the frontlines of the planetary crisis celebrated Thursday after the U.S. Senate declined to add Sen. Joe Manchin's fossil fuel-friendly permitting bill to a military spending package.

"The Senate's rejection of this dangerous bill is a resounding win for environmental justice communities and the climate."

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New trove of secret Kennedy assassination files made public

A new trove of files related to the November 1963 assassination of US president John F. Kennedy was released Thursday, but the White House held some documents back, citing national security concerns.

The National Archives said a total of 12,879 documents had been made public in the latest release.

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$858 billion US defense bill scraps military vaccine mandate

US lawmakers directed the Pentagon to rescind its Covid-19 vaccine mandate as part of the $858 billion 2023 defense spending bill passed by the Senate on Thursday.

The mandate -- under which the Pentagon says more than 8,000 military personnel have been discharged for refusal to comply -- was scrapped over the objections of US President Joe Biden and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, in a victory for Republicans who sought to end it.

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Judicial security measure clears U.S. Congress as part of defense bill

By Nate Raymond and Patricia Zengerle

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress on Thursday passed legislation that would allow U.S. Supreme Court justices and federal judges to shield their personal information from being viewed online in response to a rising number of threats targeting them.

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Did the CIA use Cuban exiles in plot involving Oswald? Questions remain as Biden withholds JFK records

Almost six decades after President John F. Kennedy’s assassination while he was riding in a motorcade in downtown Dallas, questions linger about who else, besides Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused gunman, might have been involved in what a 1979 congressional investigation report called a “conspiracy” to kill the American president. Fueling speculation and conspiracy theories anew, the CIA again vetoed the publication Thursday of thousands of documents related to the assassination, which President Joe Biden had vowed to release. In a White House memorandum, Biden said that 70% of the about 16,000 ...

Even Trump's aides were 'cringing' over his latest stunt: Maggie Haberman

The fallout from former President Donald Trump's decision to hype up his digital trading cards as a "major announcement" to his supporters continued on Thursday evening, as the New York Times' Maggie Haberman said even some of his aides were not on board with his latest initiative.

Writing on Twitter, Haberman reports that "some of Trump's own aides were cringing at the release of the NFTs," which could potentially divert money that could be going to Trump's campaign into his own pocket.

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Republican's response to motion to dismiss election challenge is rife with errors and evidence-free theories

In a filing riddled with errors and new evidence-free claims of forgery and election malfeasance, the attorney for failed GOP secretary of state candidate Mark Finchem says there are no grounds for a judge to dismiss the challenge to the election results without conducting a hearing on the claims.

Finchem is seeking to overturn his loss last month to Democrat Adrian Fontes, who won by about 5 percentage points — more than 120,000 votes in the statewide contest — making sprawling claims of election malfeasance at the hands of Maricopa County and Secretary of State Katie Hobbs. He wants his election loss to Fontes overturned, a statewide hand-recount of all ballots and a court order that the attorney general investigate Hobbs for what he claims was self-dealing and threatening public officials.

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There’s 1 question Republicans 'dare not' publicly ask about Trump’s 'low-energy' campaign: journalist

A month has passed since Donald Trump officially announced that he is seeking the GOP nomination in the 2024 presidential election. The November 15 announcement received plenty of media coverage, but so far, Trump’s 2024 campaign hasn’t caught fire the way his 2016 campaign did. And some prominent figures on the right, including author Ann Coulter and pundits at Fox News and Fox Business, are aggressively pushing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis as an alternative to Trump for the 2024 election.

In an op-ed published by The Hill on December 15, journalist Myra Adams stresses that there is a question that “no one dares to voice” publicly at GOP gatherings: “Will former President Trump drop out of the 2024 presidential race?” But that, according to Adams, doesn’t mean that Republicans aren’t thinking it.

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Workers, not 'stockbrokers and CEOs,' will pay price for Fed rate hikes: Elizabeth Warren

Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the most outspoken critic of Federal Reserve policy in Congress, said Wednesday that the central bank's decision to continue raising interest rates into 2023 risks "throwing millions out of work," a warning that came shortly after Fed Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged the U.S. unemployment rate will likely rise in the coming months.

"Chair Powell has a dual mandate: to bring inflation down and keep unemployment low," Warren wrote on Twitter. "But his rate hikes risk throwing millions out of work. He should remember that the people who'll lose their jobs aren't stockbrokers and CEOs, it's working people who need that paycheck every week."

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Revealed: New grand jury to consider Trump evidence into 2023

The latest subpoena from the Justice Department's Special Counsel Jack Smith shows that the investigation into Donald Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election will be before a newer grand jury until at least March of 2023, Bloomberg reports.

"A subpoena received earlier this week by Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger refers to a different grand jury than the one listed in document requests issued by the special counsel in November. Grand jury #22-5, which was impaneled May 18 and heard Jan. 6-related evidence through the fall, has expired, according to Lisa Klem, a spokesperson for the federal district court in Washington," Bloomberg's report states.

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Another top conservative outlet jumps on Trump with 'Sorry Donald' column

The Washington Times, one of the nation’s largest conservative publications, blistered Donald Trump Tuesday with a commentary whose headline speaks for itself:

“Sorry, Donald, Republicans just don’t want you in 2024.”

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