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Joe Biden

US at risk of becoming authoritarian state after Jan. 6 insurrection, experts say

Former President Donald Trump and his Republican allies, including many in Michigan, are leading a years-long attack on American democracy that could result in the country being run by an authoritarian government not elected by the people, political experts said during a Wednesday press conference regarding the upcoming Congressional hearings on the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

“I used to work at the State Department, and I know from my time there that what happens in a country where there’s an attempt to overturn Democratic elections can lead to terrible results,” Debra Perlin, the policy director at the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said at the press conference. “That leads to authoritarian states; it leads to undemocratic elections. And if what happened on Jan. 6 happened in any other country, we would have called that undemocratic. And so that’s important for us to keep in mind as we move forward into these hearings and recognize the importance of what happened and make sure that there’s accountability so it doesn’t happen here again.”

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Trump's defense is beginning to fall apart: analyst

In a Washington Post analysis, reporter Phil Bump followed one of the ongoing questions about what Donald Trump actually believes and what he's simply saying to make people like him. Trump has spent the past several decades switching key positions on issues from Democratic to Republican to far-right.

The most famous example was his pro-choice stance, which then evolved into putting women in prison for having an abortion. He then had to walk that back. Trump, who has been married three times and had multiple affairs, embraced Christianity once he became a Republican candidate for president. He then spent the campaign and his first year in office fumbling many questions about the Bible or religion.

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Automakers side with California in lawsuit over climate change, tailpipe emissions

California’s fight to regain its leadership role on regulating carbon emissions from automotive tailpipes is getting help from an unlikely ally: the car industry. Carmakers have fought with California officials for decades over air-pollution regulations. The industry initially sided with former President Donald Trump when he announced he was planning to strip California of its unique power set its own guidelines over greenhouse gas emissions. President Joe Biden’s administration announced in March it was reversing Trump’s decision, restoring California’s ability to set tougher standards than t...

John Eastman brought 'coup' plot to Trump a month before Jan. 6: analysis

A new batch of documents John Eastman is turning over to the House select committee shows the Jan. 6 plot was conceived at least a month earlier.

U.S. District Court Judge David Carter ordered the right-wing attorney to turn over emails and other documents to the panel after finding they did not fall under attorney-client privilege, and MSNBC's Steve Benen said the ruling showed a plan to disrupt the Joint Session of Congress was fully formed and ready to go as early as Dec. 7, 2020.

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Amazon's indigenous leaders make plea at Americas summit

The custodians of the primal forests that stretch across eight Latin American countries said national leaders gathering in Los Angeles this week had to listen to them if they wanted to save the Amazon.

Indigenous leaders from across South America are in the United States for the Summit of the Americas, a semi-regular gathering of heads of state from the Western Hemisphere.

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Josh Hawley called out at Senate hearing for using his Ketanji Brown Jackson line of attack on another Biden nominee

Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) on Wednesday got called out by Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) for insinuating that Laura Mate, who was nominated by President Joe Biden as a commissioner and vice chair of the United States Sentencing Commission, has a soft spot for child pornographers.

During questioning from a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, Hawley repeatedly asked Mate to comment on a letter she signed nine years ago where she stated an opposition to mandatory minimum sentences for people found guilty of possessing child pornography.

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The US Capitol riot public hearings: six questions

The investigation into last year's assault on the US Capitol by a mob of Donald Trump's supporters is entering a public phase, with two weeks of blockbuster televised hearings slated to start Thursday.

The seven Democrats and two Republicans who make up the House of Representatives committee probing the insurrection will set out exactly what happened on January 6, 2021 and who they believe aided the ringleaders.

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Judge orders new batch of John Eastman emails turned over -- including evidence of another crime

A federal judge ordered a new batch of John Eastman's emails released that includes evidence of another potential crime.

U.S. District Court Judge David Carter ordered the conservative attorney to disclose 159 documents, including emails and papers related to meetings he held with a secretive group supporting Donald Trump, to the House select committee just days before its first public hearing on the Jan.6 insurrection, reported Politico.

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‘Cutthroat infighter’: New book reveals how Meadows ‘told both sides what they wanted to hear’ during coup attempt

Nobody around Donald Trump could trust his chief of staff Mark Meadows, according to a forthcoming book by renowned journalists Peter Baker of The New York Times and Susan Glasser of The New Yorker.

Glasser previewed the book, The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021, in her "Letter from Biden's Washington" column published online on Tuesday evening.

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Republicans' 'abject racism' slammed for thinking they could buy Herschel Walker 'Black votes' with gas cards

On Tuesday's edition of MSNBC's "The ReidOut," political scientist Jason Johnson tore into a pro-Herschel Walker super PAC's move in Georgia to give out free gas cards in a mostly Black area of the state — a scheme that Walker claims his campaign is not directly affiliated with. The giveaway has raised eyebrows but that experts say is legal as long as there's no direct requirement to pledge to vote for Walker to receive the money.

Legal or not, however, Johnson contended that the scheme was offensive — especially in light of the GOP's recent move to ban anyone from handing out water to voters at polling places.

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Jan. 3 Oval Office meeting to be highlighted in Jan. 6 hearings -- and may feature ​Trump senior staffer

The upcoming select committee prime-time hearings could feature two senior staffers to Donald Trump who were participants in a key Oval Office on the Sunday before the attempted coup.

"The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol is in active discussions with former White House counsel Pat Cipollone regarding a potential public appearance in one of their upcoming hearings, according to sources familiar with the matter," ABC News reported Tuesday. "Cipollone was one of the few aides who was with then-President Donald Trump in the West Wing on Jan. 6. ABC News previously reported that in the days following the attack on the Capitol, he advised Trump that Trump could potentially face civil liability in connection with his role encouraging supporters to march on the Capitol."

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Lawmaker leaves GOP to run as an independent — and it may help re-elect a Dem governor: report

State Sen. Dennis Pyle filed paperwork to launch an independent campaign for Kansas governor and enter a race that features Republican Attorney General Derek Schmidt and Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly.

Pyle, a Hiawatha farmer among the Senate’s conservative members, said he submitted documents Monday night to initiate the campaign. Pyle and running mate Kathleen Garrison of Haysville would need 5,000 petition signatures to be on the November general election ballot.

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GOP split over defending Trump from Jan. 6 hearings – but he expects Republicans ‘to fight for his honor’: reports

Republicans are divided on how to defend Donald Trump against the Jan. 6 committee's upcoming hearings, NBC News reports.

Some say that defending Trump would be a wasted effort since Americans' interest in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol has waned, and that Republicans should instead focus on what they say are President Joe Biden's weaknesses, specifically inflation and rising gas prices.

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