RawStory

Joe Biden

Anger, frustration over wildfire as Biden visits New Mexico

By Andrew Hay and Trevor Hunnicutt

TAOS, N.M., LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden will be greeted with the anger and frustration of New Mexico wildfire survivors on Saturday when he visits the state to review efforts to fight its biggest blaze in recorded history that was started by federal officials.

Keep reading... Show less

Watch: Jamie Raskin lambasts Republicans for 'turning a total blind eye' to January 6th violence

United States Representative Jamie Raskin (D-Maryland), a ranking member on the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, tore into former President Donald Trump and his Republican enablers on Friday morning hours after the bipartisan commission held its first public hearing.

“Well we dispelled the thick fog of propaganda that Trump and his supporters continue to emit about what happened" on January 6th, Raskin told MSNBC's Willie Geist.

Keep reading... Show less

'He still hopes to run for governor?' Experts say Ryan Kelley’s arrest is emblematic of growing far-right violence

After Republican gubernatorial candidate Ryan Kelley was arrested Thursday by the FBI on charges related to his role in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, during which supporters of former President Donald Trump attempted to overthrow the United States government, his campaign posted two words on social media: “Political Prisoner.”

This sentiment — that Kelley’s arrest is rooted in Democratic politics and not the law — isone that far-right commentators like Fox News’ Tucker Carlson and a parade of GOP officials and organizations in Michigan, including the Michigan Republican Party, are pushing without evidence. (Michigan Republican Party Chairman Ron Weiser, for example, said Democrats are “weaponizing our justice system” and GOP gubernatorial candidate Garrett Soldano called the FBI an “arm of the Democrat Party.”)

While this messaging is almost certain to boost Kelley’s name recognition as he attempts to defeat his four Republican opponents on the ballot in a tumultuous primary, it may not lend him credibility if he lands in the general election against Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Keep reading... Show less

Pennsylvania’s GOP gubernatorial nominee is 'like Jim Jones in Guyana' and has both parties worried: report

In the swing state of Pennsylvania, Republican primary voters have nominated a gubernatorial candidate who, shockingly, is even to the right of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas: State Sen. Doug Mastriano, who is going up against the Democratic nominee, Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, in the general election. Mastriano is a far-right, ultra-MAGA Christian nationalist and conspiracy theorist who continues to promote the Big Lie and falsely claims that the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald Trump — and a combination of Democrats and establishment Republicans are cringing over the nomination.

Democrats are cringing because Mastriano is so extreme. Republicans are cringing because they fear their party may have blown a chance to have a GOP governor in 2023.

Keep reading... Show less

Bush ethics lawyer: The Jan. 6 committee needs to follow the money

In an opinion piece for MSNBC, Richard Painter -- the chief White House ethics lawyer in the George W. Bush administration from 2005 to 2007 -- brings up what many see as a 'critical' question about the aims of the House Select Committee's public hearings regarding the events of January 6, 2021, as well as identifies "several key areas where the Jan. 6 committee should be directing their focus."

"Where did the money come from? Who paid for this over two-month effort to reverse the results of an election that President Joe Biden won by over eight million votes? And who paid for what almost became a military coup as well as a violent insurrection?" Painter writes. "It is also illegal to use campaign funds to pay for an insurrection or any other illegal conduct."

Keep reading... Show less

Bob Marley brings common cause at Americas summit

Bob Marley famously sang "Africa Unite" but on Friday he was bringing unity to an Americas summit that was marked by disputes.

Taking the podium at the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles, Prime Minister Mia Mottley of Barbados quoted the late reggae legend as she said, "There is so much trouble in the world."

Keep reading... Show less

EU chief visits Ukraine as Zelensky says world must not look away

EU chief Ursula von der Leyen visited Ukraine on Saturday to discuss the country's hopes of joining the bloc, as President Volodymyr Zelensky warned the world not to look away from the conflict devastating his country.

Von der Leyen's visit -- her second since Russia's February 24 invasion -- came as fierce battles continued in the east and south of Ukraine.

Keep reading... Show less

DC insider: New revelations show Ginni Thomas 'very much a part of seditious conspiracy'

Ginni Thomas, the right-wing activist and wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, lobbied far more Arizona state lawmakers than previously known to try to overturn the state's 2020 election results—a revelation that reignited calls on Friday for Justice Thomas to recuse himself from cases related to the election.

"As obvious as the symmetry between Clarence and Ginni Thomas' work was three weeks ago, it's even more glaring now."

Keep reading... Show less

Ashli Babbitt’s family still hasn’t filed wrongful death suit, report says

The family of Ashli Babbitt — the woman shot dead while storming the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 — still hasn’t filed the wrongful-death suit for which their legal team raised $460,000, a news outlet in her former hometown reports. Babbitt was felled by a single shot fired by a Capitol Police officer defending members of Congress as extremists loyal to former President Donald Trump attempted to stop the certification of President Joe Biden’s 2020 electoral win. Lt. Michael Byrd, who was cleared of any wrongdoing, fired at Babbitt as she stormed through a door leading into the House of Represe...

Biden leads Americas' pledge on migration after contested summit

US President Joe Biden on Friday led a pledge by 20 nations in the Americas to work together on migration, seeking to step up action on a growing political priority at a summit beset by disputes.

The weeklong Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles wound down with promises by Biden to do more, and a joint declaration on migration that largely formalized existing arrangements rather than setting new policy.

Keep reading... Show less

Bill Maher takes Jan. 6 victory lap — and launches incestuous rape joke against Ivanka Trump

The host of HBO's "Real Time" had a salacious monologue on day after the first prime-time hearing by the House Select Committee Investigating the Jan. 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Host Bill Maher took a victory lap, showing multiple clips where he predicted that Trump would refuse to leave office if he lost the 2020 presidential election. Although Trump attempted a coup, Joe Biden took office on Jan. 20, 2021.

Keep reading... Show less

US seeks help controlling ‘unprecedented’ flow of migrants from Latin American nations

LOS ANGELES — The Biden administration wants countries along a dangerous migration route through South and Central America to help address the unprecedented flow of migrants at the southern border with Mexico by committing to expand their asylum systems and enforce their borders under a new regional partnership announced Friday during the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles. The administration secured the support of 18 countries from Latin America and the Caribbean, including Haiti, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, which are some of the main emitters of migrants to United States. Mexico ...

Jan. 6 hearing shows that pro-Trump social media survives -- in spite of bans

Supporters of Donald Trump "scrambled to defend him online" after prime-time hearings by the Jan. 6 select committee, The Washington Post reported Friday.

"Trump War Room, a Twitter account once run by his reelection campaign, tweeted, “Trump and the rally had nothing to do with the Capitol breach!" defying the House committee’s effort to pin responsibility for the riot squarely on Trump," the newspaper reported.

Keep reading... Show less