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Joe Biden

Helmet-wearing Biden aims to emulate back-to-back Super Bowl champs

Was it a sign that Joe Biden is preparing for a bruising election battle ahead?

The U.S. president put a Kansas City Chiefs helmet on his head as he welcomed the Super Bowl winners to the White House on Friday -- then joked he wanted to be back-to-back champions like them.

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Trump campaign announces $35 million raised after conviction

Donald Trump's campaign said Friday it had raised nearly $53 million in online small-dollar donations after he was convicted in his New York hush money trial, boasting that the verdict had galvanized his support "like never before."

The record haul was equivalent to more than $2 million raised per hour, it said.

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'Time for this war to end': Biden pushes Israeli plan for Gaza truce

U.S. President Joe Biden said Friday Israel had offered a new roadmap towards a permanent peace in Gaza, urging Hamas to accept the surprise deal as it was "time for this war to end."

In his first major address outlining a solution to the conflict, Biden said the three-phase proposal starts with a six-week complete ceasefire that would see Israeli forces withdraw from all populated areas of Gaza.

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Lara Trump says Biden responsible for juror security issues amid reports of violent threat

The 12 jurors who sat for five weeks and reached a unanimous guilty verdict in District Attorney Alvin Bragg's 34-criminal count prosecution of Donald Trump are now being targeted, apparently by some of the ex-president's anonymous supporters, with calls to "dox" and even kill them. And they're using some of the same platforms used by January 6 organizers and insurrectionists.

"On social media and web forums, users called for jurors, judges and prosecutors to be killed after the former president was found guilty on 34 felony counts," NBC News reports, adding the guilty verdicts have also "spurred a wave of violent rhetoric aimed at the prosecutors," and the judge.

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'Trump scares them': GOP pollster reveals how two-time Trump voters felt after conviction

Republicans Voters Against Trump director Sarah Longwell said that a focus group with prospective voters held one day after Donald Trump was minted a felon — is enough for most to not punch a vote for him come November 5.

"I was listening to a focus group that we’re convening right now, as we speak, of two-time Trump voters who rate Trump as doing a very bad job," she said during an interview with Nicolle Wallace on MSNBC. "They view him unfavorably. And those are the people who we are trying to persuade to not vote for Trump in the 2024 election."

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'I need a hug': CNN hosts cut off Trump ally who refuses to have 'decent conversation'

Tempers flared and a roundtable discussion on former President Donald Trump's criminal conviction devolved into chaos on CNN Friday evening, as visibly exasperated hosts Boris Sanchez and Brianna Keilar were forced to cut short a furious rant by former Trump White House spokesman Hogan Gidley, who was debating alongside former President Bill Clinton adviser Paul Begala.

"He hurts himself when he goes on these hysterical rants," said Begala. "Yes, he helps himself with his base, but his base is not the majority of the country, and there will be some MAGA people who feel some pity — look, in a way I do. He's an obese, flatulent old man with bad makeup and weird hair who had to sit in a courtroom and listen to a porn star testify about how bad he is in bed."

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'We could do terrible things to you': Alito neighbor says his security detail stalked her

A Supreme Court justice’s security detail was used to intimidate neighbors whose political beliefs countered that of his wife’s, one such neighbor told the Guardian Friday.

At the center of the dispute stood the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 — an event that Supreme Court justice must now consider as he weighs former President Donald Trump’s defense in his federal election interference case.

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'Mockery of the rule of law': GOP senators vow to stonewall Dems after Trump conviction

A group of Republican Senators announced they plan to stop working with Democrats in Washington D.C. after 12 jurors convicted former President Donald Trump on criminal charges in New York City.

Sens. Mike Lee (R-UT) and J.D. Vance (R-OH) lead a list of eight senators who are now promising to stonewall funding increases, political appointments and Democrat-backed legislation under the administration of President Joe Biden, according to a letter dated Friday.

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'Worst argument I've heard': Kellyanne Conway's attempt to spin Trump verdict trashed

Former Trump White House counselor Kellyanne Conway on Friday defiantly defended former President Donald Trump after he was found guilty of 34 felony counts earlier this week.

Writing on Twitter, Conway used one of her tried-and-tested spin tactics that she regularly employed while at the White House: Namely, she pivoted to attacking Trump's political opponents.

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Trump's 'state of mind' questioned after 'incoherent' felony conviction speech

The entire CNN panel covering Donald Trump's Friday speech at Trump Tower Friday expressed surprise he fled from the press without taking questions, with host Kasie Hunt suggesting the former president is having trouble dealing with his life as a convicted felon.

With the speech already labeled as "very disjointed" by host Erin Burnett, CNN Political Director David Chalian expressed dismay that he ducked out on what was supposed to be a press availability — and derisively labeled the event, "A venting session for a convicted felon."

That led Bloomberg columnist Nia-Malika Henderson to note Trump's attack on President Joe Biden's age, and point out Trump can't "really speak or put two sentences together."

ALSO READ: Buckle up for Trump's 'October Surprise'

"It was, I think, surprisingly incoherent; surprisingly all over the place. He wants to make this argument about age against Biden, but here he was looking, you know, kind of like an old man who was just ranting and raving in a self-involved way," she elaborated.

She then added, "This wasn't a great outing for him. I think it was probably smart of him not to answer questions given where he has been so far in this speech. And if you look at the times he has answered questions, he gets himself in trouble on any number of issues."

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'Reality sank in' for MAGA fans who were fed 'stream of garbage' about Trump trial: expert

National security attorney Bradley Moss on Friday argued that Trump supporters' stunned reaction to the former president's guilty verdict is a direct reflection of their media consumption.

Specifically, Moss argued that right-wing media outlets have been systematically misleading their viewers in their coverage of former President Donald Trump's Manhattan hush money trial.

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'Very disjointed': Donald Trump rambles aimlessly in unscripted guilty verdict speech

Former President Donald Trump addressed the public in an extensive address on Friday in which he rambled aimlessly about nondisclosure agreements, his gag order, and maintained that the crimes he was convicted of never happened or weren't illegal.

He was speaking from his Fifth Avenue tower about being found guilty on all 34 counts on Thursday.

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‘That's the Kool-Aid’: Republicans triple down on Trump the morning after guilty verdict

WASHINGTON — Here, on Trump’s Morning After, Republicans are feeling bullish. That’s right. On the right — today’s new right, that is — former President Donald Trump’s guilty verdict is seen as a boon for the GOP.

While the GOP could use this week’s historic guilty verdict to break up with the man who co-opted their party back in 2016, it doesn’t seem Republicans are ready to go back to their Reaganesque conservative roots. Instead, they’re tripling down on Trump and betting that his personal brand of populism will carry the party to victory come November.

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