RawStory

Joe Biden

There should be a way to ‘muzzle’ Trump to stop him from being a national security 'hazard': Alexander Vindman

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman (US Army, retired) voiced his frustration on Friday that former President Donald Trump is undermining national security by publicly asking Vladimir Putin to interfere in America's politics to harm the Democratic Party.

On Tuesday, Trump begged Putin to release dirt on President Joe Biden.

Keep reading... Show less

Georgia GOP is ‘legislating based on conspiracy theories and lies’: Washington Post editorial board

Donald Trump is successfully bullying Republicans in Georgia to legislate based on his "big lie" of election fraud.

On Saturday, Trump traveled to the Peach State for a rally against Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, two statewide elected Republicans that Trump has publicly trashed since they refused his efforts to overturn the 2020 election in the state, which was won by Joe Biden.

Keep reading... Show less

Bill to legalize marijuana passes US House, but faces dim prospects in Senate

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives on Friday passed a bill to end the federal ban on marijuana, which has created legal headaches for users and businesses in the states that have legalized it, though the measure was seen as unlikely to pass the Senate.

It passed by 220-204, with few Republicans supporting the measure.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump’s Republican revenge tour falters in Georgia

When the dust settles on the 2022 elections in Georgia, Donald Trump’s loudest critics and fiercest supporters will probably agree on one thing: the state’s politics will be forever changed by his fixation on the 2020 election here.

Speaking on a windy Saturday evening at a former drag racing strip in Commerce, northeast of Atlanta, the former president touted a slate of seven GOP primary challengers and continued a scorched-earth approach against incumbent Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and their allies for failing to attempt to overturn his 2020 defeat.

Keep reading... Show less

US labor market nears full recovery after strong March hiring

The US labor market has almost recovered from the mass joblessness caused by the pandemic, adding hundreds of thousands of positions last month and sending the unemployment rate nearly to where it was before Covid-19 broke out nationwide.

The Labor Department reported Friday that the unemployment rate fell more than analysts had predicted in March to 3.6 percent, a hair above its February 2020 level of 3.5 percent, while the economy added 431,000 jobs in the month.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge's 'outrage leaps off the page' in scathing ruling against Trump and Eastman: legal expert

A federal judge "brought down the hammer" on Donald Trump and law professor John Eastman over their efforts to overturn the 2020 election, and a legal expert analyzed the ruling that found they "likely committed" multiple crimes as part of the scheme.

U.S. District Judge David O. Carter ruled broadly against Eastman's claims of attorney-client privilege, and the ruling concluded the president and his legal adviser had likely attempted to obstruct a congressional proceeding, engaged in a conspiracy to defraud the U.S. and taken part in common law fraud -- and The Bulwark's Kimberly Wehle examined what might come next.

Keep reading... Show less

New reports suggest a 'significant shift' in DOJ's willingness to go after Trump: former federal prosecutor

Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti on Thursday suggested that there are new indications that the United States Department of Justice is going to start focusing its investigations on former President Donald Trump.

In a lengthy Twitter thread, Mariotti pointed to new reports suggesting the DOJ has started probing a "a higher level of rally planning" for the January 6th Stop the Steal event, rather than just investigating the rallygoers who violently stormed the Capitol afterward.

Keep reading... Show less

Ahead of Trump rally, top Michigan official says her state is 'ground zero' for threats against democracy

The spread of misinformation about the 2020 presidential election isn’t going to quiet down until those who have been spreading “the big lie” face consequences, Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said Wednesday during a press conference.

The big lie is a conspiracy theory pushed by former President Donald Trump and his supporters that falsely claims the 2020 election was rigged against him and there was widespread voter fraud.

Keep reading... Show less

'This is a charade': Pennsylvania Democrats walk out of GOP-led election hearing

The Pennsylvania Senate committee that’s investigating the 2020 general and 2021 primary elections saw a walkout from Democratic members after its Republican chairperson refused to swear in a conservative panel during its first public meeting since last September.

“The Democrats will not participate in a kangaroo operation that is set up with no bipartisanship conversation beforehand, as is the case of all of the hearings that we do in this body,” Sen. Vincent Hughes, D-Philadelphia, shouted as the Senate Intergovernmental Operations Committee sat at ease Thursday.

Keep reading... Show less

Chuck Todd corners GOP senator on Trump still 'playing footsie' with 'war criminal' Putin

NBC News' Chuck Todd on Thursday grilled Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-ND) about Donald Trump once again asking Russian President Vladimir Putin for help in hurting a domestic political opponent.

Although Cramer initially tried to dodge questions about Trump asking Putin to release "dirt" on President Joe Biden's son, Todd wouldn't let him off the hook.

Keep reading... Show less

'Body blow to working people': Right-wing Democrats reject Biden labor nominee

Economists and workers' rights advocates on Thursday condemned the latest setback for working people dealt by right-wing Democratic lawmakers, three of whom joined every Republican senator in opposing President Joe Biden's nominee to lead the Labor Department's Wage and Hour Division after being aggressively lobbied by business interests.

Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), and Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) voted against allowing Dr. David Weil's nomination to move forward Wednesday evening, several months after the former Obama administration official was first nominated for the top wage regulatory role.

Keep reading... Show less

US House set to vote for life-changing $35 insulin price cap

US lawmakers were set to vote Thursday on a bill that would limit the cost of insulin to $35 a month, a transformative curb for millions of diabetics who pay hundreds of dollars for the life-sustaining hormone.

Drug pricing has vexed politicians for years in the United States, which has the highest annual health expenditure of any industrialized country, at around $11,000 per capita.

Keep reading... Show less

Biden orders unprecedented use of oil stockpile to combat US fuel prices

President Joe Biden will announce Thursday a record release from US strategic oil reserves in an attempt to curb a politically damaging surge in domestic fuel prices following Russia's attack on Ukraine, the White House said.

The measure will dump a million barrels of US government oil a day for six months onto the overheated global market in hopes of dampening inflationary shockwaves ripping through the American economy.

Keep reading... Show less