RawStory

Joe Biden

Lies about the 2020 election propel Arizona bills aimed at combating non-existent fraud

Cheered on by an enthusiastic crowd that espoused conspiracy theories about fraud in the 2020 presidential vote and touted the largely debunked findings of the so-called Maricopa County “audit,” the Senate Government Committee on Monday advanced a slew of bills aimed at curbing or alleviating concerns about election fraud in Arizona, despite little evidence of such incidents.

The committee passed seven bills that proponents described as measures that would prevent fraud in future elections. The legislation included laws mandating counter-fraud security measures, probes into people who can’t prove their citizenship when they register to vote, reviews of election equipment, prohibiting all-mail balloting, changing mandatory recount rules and requiring images of all ballots to be posted online.

Keep reading... Show less

How the Biden administration is making gains in an uphill battle against Russian hackers

On Jan. 14, 2022, the FSB, Russia’s domestic intelligence service, announced that it had broken up the notorious Russia-based REvil ransomware criminal organization. The FSB said the actions were taken in response to a request from U.S. authorities. The move marks a dramatic shift in Russia’s response to criminal cyberattacks launched against U.S. targets from within Russia, and comes at a time of heightened tensions between the two countries.

U.S. policy and actions in response to cyberattacks connected to Russia have changed distinctly since the Biden administration took office. President Joe Biden has openly confronted Russian President Vladimir Putin on his responsibility regarding international cyberattacks, and the Biden administration has taken unprecedented steps to impose costs on Russian cyber criminals and frustrate their efforts.

Keep reading... Show less

Homeland Security fears right-wing extremists will attack the power grid

The Department of Homeland Security issued a threat warning that right-wing extremists have been crafting plans to attack the electric sector, including the power grid, the Daily Beast reported Tuesday.

"DVEs have developed credible, specific plans to attack electricity infrastructure since at least 2020, identifying the electric grid as a particularly attractive target given its interdependency with other infrastructure sectors," said the alert.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's lawyers busted for trying to pull a fast one in court filing against Twitter

Donald Trump's lawyers got caught trying to pull a fast one in a court filing as part of his lawsuit against Twitter.

The twice-impeached one-term president's lawyers are trying to persuade the court that Twitter conspired with the government to limit conservative voices on social media, but the tech companies lawyers spotted a misleading substitution in a quote of a congressional memo by Trump's legal team.

Keep reading... Show less

Arizona's attorney general just got blasted for becoming a 'Trump toady' who 'ignores traitors'

After now-President Joe Biden defeated then-President Donald Trump in Arizona in the 2020 election, State Attorney General Mark Brnovich was among the Arizona Republicans who refused to promote Trump’s false claims of election fraud. Brnovich, like GOP Gov. Doug Ducey, acknowledged that Biden won the state fairly. But in a scathing op-ed published by the Arizona Republic on January 24, journalist E.J. Montini slams Brnovich for his recent pandering to the MAGA crowd.

Brnovich is running for the U.S. Senate seat presently held by Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly and once held by the late Sen. John McCain and, before that, Sen. Barry Goldwater. While Kelly is seeking reelection in 2022, Arizona’s other Democratic U.S. senator, Kyrsten Sinema, isn’t up for reelection until 2024.

Keep reading... Show less

'Worse than ignorant': 'Troll' MAGA congressman slammed over claim Biden is 'maligning the free press'

U.S. Rep. Jim Banks (R-IN), a far right-wing extremist who forged multiple congressional documents sent to federal agencies and voted to not certify the 2020 election, is under fire after criticizing President Joe Biden for maligning the free press while suggesting President Donald Trump never attacked the media.

Banks is an anti-LGBTQ activist, anti-science climate change denier, and opposes a woman's right to choose, Obamacare, and same-sex marriage.

Keep reading... Show less

Conservative mocks 'MAGA civility police' for freaking out over Biden's flap with Fox News reporter

On Tuesday, writing for The Bulwark, conservative writer Charlie Sykes mocked allies of former President Donald Trump who are attacking President Joe Biden's hot-mic dismissal of Fox News reporter Peter Doocy as a "stupid son of a b*tch." Sykes described them as "MAGA civility police," who are incapable of shame over cheering far worse attacks on the press from their idol.

"By all means, let’s engage in the required pearl clutching over Joe Biden’s open mic incivility," wrote Sykes, making a pointed jab at Rep. Jim Banks (R-IN) who suggested we've never seen a worse "attack" on "the free press."

Keep reading... Show less

Democracy isn’t facing just one threat in America — it is actually facing four: report

America is facing four distinct threats to democracy as the country prepares for the 2022 midterm elections, according to a new analysis in Vox.

"Leading Democrats, many academics, liberal commentators, and left-leaning activists agree: American democracy is in grave peril. It’s besieged on all sides, the threats culminating so far in Donald Trump’s attempt to steal the 2020 presidential election from Joe Biden. More tumult likely lies ahead," Andrew Prokop wrote. "Too often, though, all this tends to be conflated and treated as similarly urgent in what has become a thinkpiece-industrial complex about democracy’s peril, and by a liberal establishment mostly concerned with offering reasons to vote for Democrats rather than Republicans. These threats may well have a common root, but they are distinct problems that would have separate solutions."

Keep reading... Show less

North Korea fires two suspected cruise missiles, Seoul says

North Korea fired two suspected cruise missiles Tuesday, Seoul said, its fifth weapons test this year as Pyongyang flexes its military muscles while ignoring US offers of talks.

The last time North Korea tested this many weapons in a month was in 2019, after high-profile negotiations collapsed between leader Kim Jong Un and then-US president Donald Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

Russia says US troop alert 'escalating tensions'

Moscow on Tuesday accused the United States of ratcheting up tensions over Ukraine after Washington put several thousand troops on alert for possible deployment to boost NATO.

The West is accusing Russia, which has massed 100,000 troops on the Ukrainian border, of preparing a potential invasion of its pro-Western neighbor.

Keep reading... Show less

'Nothing personal, pal': Peter Doocy says Biden called to clear the air with him after calling him a 'stupid SOB'

President Joe Biden on Monday called Fox News' Peter Doocy a "stupid son of a bitch" after he asked the president whether he believed inflation would be a political liability for him.

Doocy then revealed to host Sean Hannity that Biden actually called him up to apologize for profanely chewing him out.

Keep reading... Show less

Fresh turmoil hits Wisconsin GOP 'audit' as lawyer says he has 'no idea' if auditor is complying with records requests

On Monday, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that an attorney representing Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos has admitted to not monitoring whether Michael Gableman, a pro-Trump former state Supreme Court justice conducting a partisan "audit" of the state's 2020 election, is properly complying with an open records request.

"The testimony from Vos' staff attorney, Steve Fawcett, caught the attention of Dane County Circuit Judge Valerie Bailey-Rihn, who started the day's proceedings by saying she didn't understand why Republicans have provided so few records in response to requests from American Oversight," reported Patrick Marley. "Gableman's initial contract with the Assembly requires him to keep a weekly report of the findings of his review. Gableman publicly released a report in November but has never made available any weekly reports. Asked if Gableman has been writing weekly reports, Fawcett said, 'I have no idea.'"

Keep reading... Show less

John Eastman's former university wants to hand over 19,000 of his emails on its server to Congress: report

On Monday, Yahoo News' Michael Isikoff reported that Chapman University supports a subpoena from the House January 6 Committee requesting 19,000 emails from pro-Trump lawyer John Eastman relating to his work for the former president to overturn the 2020 presidential election, which are apparently on the school servers.

At a hearing on the matter, a lawyer for the university said that Eastman's use of their server to conduct that business was "improper, unauthorized and I liken to contraband."

Keep reading... Show less