RawStory

Joe Biden

Big Oil meeting with US govt cordial but no miracle gas price fix

US gasoline prices are near record highs after Russia's invasion of Ukraine

Washington (AFP) - Biden administration officials and oil industry executives huddled in Washington on Thursday to discuss potential steps to address runaway gasoline prices, and while both sides called the talks constructive, no concrete plans for relief emerged.

High prices at the pump are weighing on American consumers -- and damaging President Joe Biden's approval rating.

Keep reading... Show less

U.S. Senate approves first major gun legislation since 1994, one month after Uvalde shooting

WASHINGTON — U.S. Sen. John Cornyn succeeded Thursday in passing landmark gun legislation in the Senate, an achievement that comes just weeks after 19 children and two teachers were murdered in a school shooting in Uvalde.

Known as the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, Cornyn expended two decades of political capital toward moving the bill, in what was an almost unthinkable move for a Republican representing a state that often proudly touts that it has the most firearms and some of the loosest gun restrictions.

Cornyn, the bill’s lead sponsor, worked closely with Republican and Senate colleagues garnering enough votes from his own party in the Senate to overcome a filibuster threat with some breathing room.

Keep reading... Show less

Eric Greitens wife feared he was both homicidal and suicidal: report

It was 10 days since her husband, Eric Greitens, resigned as governor and Sheena Greitens was terrified.

In that period, she wrote to a family lawyer in a June 14, 2018, email, Eric Greitens had been violent twice to one of his sons, lost his temper repeatedly and refused to admit his actions were a source of the family’s problems.

Keep reading... Show less

US justice officials outline Trump's 'brazen' takeover bid

Former assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Counsel Steven Engel (2nd L), former acting attorney general Jeffrey Rosen (C) and former acting deputy attorney general Richard Donoghue (R) are sworn in by committee chairman Bennie...

Washington (AFP) - Lawmakers investigating the attack on the US Capitol on Thursday detailed Donald Trump's efforts to recruit the Justice Department into his scheme to overturn his defeat to Joe Biden -- attempting to replace its head with a loyalist who was "meddling in the outcome of a presidential election."

At the fifth hearing into its year-long probe of the January 2021 insurrection, the House of Representatives panel described Trump's pressure on officials to amplify his false claims that his presidency had been stolen by widespread voter fraud.

Keep reading... Show less

Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene are panic-tweeting after revelations they sought pardons

The House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol concluded its fifth public hearing on Thursday and revealed that multiple Republican members of Congress – Mo Brooks (Alabama), Matt Gaetz (Florida), Louie Gohmert (Texas), Scott Perry (Pennsylvania), and Marjorie Taylor Greene (Georgia) – sought pardons in January of 2021 from then-President Donald Trump after they voted against certifying President Joe Biden's 2020 victory in the Electoral College.

Not long after the bipartisan panel recessed, Gaetz, a fiercely loyal Trump ally and proponent of the Big Lie, took to Twitter to disparage his colleagues and their historic inquiry.

Keep reading... Show less

‘The committee had the receipts’: CNN panel taken aback by 'a very disturbing day of testimony'

CNN's panel on Thursday praised the latest public hearing of the House Select Committee Investigating the Jan. 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol.

"All right, there it is," Jake Tapper said immediately following the end of the hearing. "The end of a very disturbing day of testimony from top officials of the Trump Justice Department, talking about how Donald Trump tried to weaponize the justice department to steal the election from not just Joe Biden, but from the American people."

Keep reading... Show less

Jan. 6 committee outlines how GOP congressman Scott Perry pushed to restructure Justice Department

In the days leading up to the Jan. 6, 2020, attack on the U.S. Capitol, U.S. Rep. Scott Perry(R-PA) pushed to restructure the Department of Justice as former President Donald Trump and his allies led efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

The U.S. House committee investigating the Capitol riot subpoenaed Perry, R-10th District, last year, citing his involvement in attempts to appoint Jeffrey Clark as acting attorney general.

Keep reading... Show less

Exclusive: Christian nationalist group financed recall effort that resulted in harassment

During his testimony before the January 6th Committee on Tuesday, Rusty Bowers, the Republican speaker of the Arizona House of Representatives, recounted how his family faced harassment after he resisted repeated requests by President Trump and his allies to decertify Arizona’s electors for Joe Biden.

“At home, up ’til even recently, it is the new pattern, or a pattern in our lives to worry what will happen on Saturdays because we have various groups come by, and they have had video panel trucks with videos of me proclaiming me to be a pedophile and a pervert and a corrupt politician,” Bowers testified. “And blaring loudspeakers in my neighborhood. And leaving literature both on my property — arguing with and threatening neighbors and with myself.”

Keep reading... Show less

Ron Johnson blames another pro-Trump GOP lawmaker for phony elector documents

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) explained this week why his chief of staff had offered to deliver fake electors to then-vice president Mike Pence on January 6, 2021, and later he blamed a Republican congressman.

The House select committee presented text messages between Johnson's chief of staff, Sean Riley, and Pence aide David Hodgson offering to have the senator hand deliver documents signed by unlawful electors from Michigan and Wisconsin, and the GOP senator said on Thursday that those documents came from Rep. Mike Kelly's (R-PA) office.

Keep reading... Show less

Constitutional law professor proposes a way Congress can stop Donald Trump from running in 2024

Former President Donald Trump is almost universally expected to run again in 2024 amid multiple ongoing civil and criminal probes into his actions during his single term as well as his personal business ventures.

The highest-profile cases are being handled by the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, which Trump incited, as well as the state of Georgia, where Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has convened a grand jury to determine whether Trump broke the law when he tried to strongarm Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger and other elections officials into overturning President Joe Biden's Electoral College victory.

Keep reading... Show less

FBI interviews GOP county chairman in Pittsburgh in regards to fake elector scheme

FBI agents interviewed Allegheny County Republican Party chairman Sam DeMarco at his Pittsburgh home as part of their investigation into former President Donald Trump’s attempt to send alternate electors from key swing states to Washington to overturn the 2020 election, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports.

Agents served DeMarco with a subpoena for communications between him, members of Trump's campaign and legal team, and Trump electors in Pennsylvania.

Keep reading... Show less

How the fake Trump elector scheme fizzled in four states

Part of Donald Trump’s plan to reverse his loss in the 2020 presidential election hinged on replacing legitimate electors in a handful of swing states with “fake electors.”
In theory, these bogus Republican slates in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Nevada and Wisconsin would cast their electoral votes for the incumbent — canceling out the popular vote for Joe Biden in their states.
Keep reading... Show less

Oath Keeper who attended 'Stop the Steal' rally cleared to run for reelection to Alaska legislature

On Thursday, The Daily Beast reported that an Alaska state representative outed as a "lifetime member" of the Oath Keepers has been cleared as constitutionally eligible to run for re-election.

"The Alaska Division of Elections said Wednesday that after a review of 24 challenges to state Rep. David Eastman's candidacy, the 'preponderance of evidence supports his eligibility,' the Associated Press reported," according to Allison Quinn.

Keep reading... Show less