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Joe Biden

John Fetterman says he’s not a typical politician. Is that enough in a brutal climate for Democrats?

PHILADELPHIA — As John Fetterman campaigned in Pennsylvania’s Democratic Senate primary, he openly acknowledged — and warned — that the odds are stacked against his party. To win in November, he argued, Democrats needed to nominate someone different. His argument is about to get put to the test. President Joe Biden’s approval rating last week sunk to a new low of 39%. COVID-19 lingers as inflation rises — another spike was reported Friday — and voters say they’re frustrated with prices and gridlock in Washington. “People feel like they’re paying more for less, they don’t feel safe in their com...

Ambassador to Ukraine warns Putin still aiming to take over all of Ukraine — not just part of it

The United States has been focused on the imminent overturning of women's medical autonomy and the findings of the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on Congress. Meanwhile, Ukraine is still at war with Russia after their invasion of the country.

Over the past several months as the bombing has increased there was an idea that if Russia was given eastern Ukraine that somehow they'd leave the rest of the country alone. The U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine told the Daily Beast that it couldn't be further from the truth.

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Lauren Boebert’s GOP challenger fires back after she accuses him of corruption

“Fake headlines” is how Colorado state Sen. Don Coram refers to his primary opponent’s weekly campaign ads that run on the front page of the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel’s Sunday edition. The Montrose Republican is challenging U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert of Silt, to represent Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District.

Boebert can afford the prominent spot with campaign contributions that dwarf those of her opponents. She has raised nearly $4 million from mostly out-of-state donors, outpacing Coram, who raised $89,000 in the first three months of this year.

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Biden gambles there's more to gain by courting Saudis

Making an about-face by visiting Saudi Arabia, US President Joe Biden is betting he has more to gain than lose even as rights activists accuse him of selling his soul to oil.

Biden joins eight decades of US presidents who have all in due time courted the oil-rich kingdom, which has assiduously cultivated ties in Washington despite repeated crises including the September 11 attacks, carried out mostly by Saudis.

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Democrats' 'gerontocratic leadership' fails to grasp that 'our system is on the brink': NYT columnist

New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie argues in his Tuesday column that there is a disturbing lack of urgency from what he describes as the "gerontocratic leadership of the Democratic Party" and its response to threats to the American republic.

In particular, he cites recent statements from leaders such as President Joe Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) that overlook the grave threat presented by the Trump-radicalized Republican Party to voting rights, reproductive rights, and a host of other issues.

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'Pure insanity': Ohio Gov. signs bill to arm teachers after 24 hours of training

The Democratic candidate for governor in Ohio was among the critics condemning Gov. Mike DeWine's decision on Monday to sign a bill permitting teachers to carry a gun to class after just 24 hours of firearms training—pointing out that educators will need far more training to renew their teaching licenses than to bring a deadly weapon into their classrooms.

"Teachers will need 180 hours to renew their teaching license so they can teach your kids, but only up to 24 hours of training to carry a gun around with them," Nan Whaley, who was the mayor of Dayton in August 2019 when a mass shooting there killed 10 people and injured 27, told the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "That is insane."

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Watch: GOP's Steve Scalise dodges question about enabling Trump's 'nuts' election claims

Earlier this week, the House Select Committee investigating the January 6th riots played testimony from multiple high-ranking former Trump officials who believed the former president's claims about voter fraud were detached from reality.

On Tuesday, a reporter asked Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) if he had any regrets about refusing to certify President Joe Biden's election victory given the fact that Trump's own officials called his election fraud claims "silly," "bogus," and "nuts."

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Biden scolds Wall Street, defends economic record to unions amid recession fears

By Nandita Bose

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden defended his economic track record at a union convention in Philadelphia on Tuesday amid rising recession fears on Wall Street, as he seeks to deepen relationships with organized labor and improve his approval ratings among Democrats.

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C-SPAN quickly disconnects Republican caller claiming Biden 'clearly a doppelganger'

C-SPAN host John McArdle disconnected a Republican caller on Tuesday after she said that President Joe Biden is "clearly a doppelganger."

During C-SPAN's Washington Journal program, a woman from Apex, North Carolina called in with a comment for conservative columnist Cal Thomas.

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Ginni Thomas associates stunned she has been ‘sucked into a cult again’ after 'deprogramming'

Revelations that Ginni Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, has been one of the biggest and most influential proponents of Donald Trump's election theft conspiracies has stunned some of her former associates who remember her work opposing cults in the 1980's.

Thomas has been under increasing scrutiny over texts she sent to former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows imploring him to listen to fringe lawyers pushing legal strategies that would have allowed the former president to remain in the Oval Office. Then, last week, it was reported that she had been emailing GOP lawmakers in Arizona to "Stand strong in the face of political and media pressure,” and overturn Joe Biden's win in their state.

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Fox News hosts fueled 'murderous rage' over Trump's loss: former political editor

The former political director for Fox News blamed the conservative network's hosts for the "panic" and confusion over President Joe Biden's election win.

Chris Stirewalt oversaw the decision to call Arizona for Biden, before any other network had projected him the winner, which set off fury from former President Donald Trump and various Fox News broadcasters, and he told NPR that he was disturbed by the reaction.

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Wildfire tears through California forest as temperatures rocket

A wildfire was burning out of control Monday in forest outside Los Angeles after a weekend of record-breaking temperatures, and as forecasters warn of fire danger across the parched US West.

Almost 1,000 acres (400 hectares) had been charred by the Sheep fire since it erupted in the Los Angeles national forest on Saturday evening.

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Exclusive: How the FBI lambasted 'dozens' of Trump’s stolen election claims

In the weeks after 2020’s election, the Department of Justice investigated and dismissed a catalog of stolen election claims that were “completely bogus and silly and usually based on complete misinformation,” and privately and repeatedly said so to then-President Donald Trump, William Barr, Trump’s attorney general, told the House’s January 6 Committee.

But Barr and other top DOJ officials who recounted telling Trump what was wrong about his persistent claims of illegal voters, forged ballots, and altered counts, not only said that Trump refused to believe them, but that he had become “detached from reality,” as Barr put it, and instead surrounded himself with conspiratorial opportunists led by Rudy Giuliani.

In short, Trump rejected multiple FBI investigations in battleground states based on hundreds of interviews – disclosed for the first time during the committee’s June 13 hearing. Instead, he used the stolen election narrative, to, among other things, to raise $250 million from his voters, funds that the committee found were given to loyalists who fanned the stolen election lie, such a $1 million to a foundation run by Mark Meadows, his former White House chief of staff.

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