Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Kamala Harris

Democrats to volunteers: 'Don't bother Jake Tapper.' But the CNN host has other ideas.

CHICAGO — There's a golden rule for Democratic National Convention personnel tending the official press filing centers this week: leave the media luminaries alone.

“It’s easy to get star struck," a convention official who introduced himself as "Tom" said Sunday as he toured a couple dozen excited press logistics volunteers through the Chicago Bulls practice facility, which is doubling this week as a makeshift office for journalists. "They’re here to work and so are we. Don’t be all uncool.”

Keep reading... Show less

Fox News host Laura Ingraham condemns 'rock concert' Dem convention — and it backfires

Fox News personality Laura Ingraham on Sunday condemned the Democratic National Convention's "rock concert" vibe, instead insisting the event should be about "the salient issues." Experts pointed out the host's purported hypocrisy.

Ingraham, who recently called out Donald Trump's latest campaign moves as a “loser’s strategy," took to social media over the weekend to criticize how the Democrats put on their convention.

Keep reading... Show less

Democrats compete with ultimate Trump billboard during national convention

CHICAGO — As the Democratic National Convention kicks off Monday, Republican nominee Donald Trump — not Democratic nominee Kamala Harris — arguably has the most permanent and grandiose billboard in town.

It’s not a traditional billboard suspended alongside the highway, although there are plenty of those surrounding the city with decidedly convention-focused messages.

Keep reading... Show less

'He's coming apart': Trump mocked over 'panicked' social media binge before Dem convention

As Vice President Kamala Harris and the Democrats gear up for their national convention, Donald Trump is on a social media spree.

Trump on Sunday posted or shared at least 25 items to his own social media network, Truth Social. In one of those posts, the former president lashed out against Black political commentator Van Jones, who Trump said had approached him with tears in his eyes to seek criminal justice reform.

Keep reading... Show less

'We had to turn away 11,500 people!' Trump melts down over 'empty seats' rally report

Donald Trump was focusing on crowd sizes again on Sunday.

Specifically, Trump is pushing back on report that showed video of people getting up and leaving as the former president was still on stage speaking. People were starting to "trickle out" of Donald Trump's Pennsylvania rally while he was still speaking on Saturday, leaving more "empty seats," according to a campaign reporter for USA Today.

Keep reading... Show less

Ex-GOP lawmaker says Trump is doing 'enormous damage to himself' with 'asinine statements'

Donald Trump is getting "boring" and "unhinged" when he should be focusing on Vice President Kamala Harris' policies, according to former Republican lawmaker Charlie Dent.

Dent, a former GOP congressman from the swing state of Pennsylvania, appeared on MSNBC on Sunday to discuss the 2024 presidential election.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump 'failed' with J.D. Vance pick — and now he's stuck with him: election experts

Donald Trump's selection of Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) as his running mate in the 2024 presidential has gone from bad to worse as the more the public gets to know about the Ohio Republican and his controversial views, the less they like him.

With recent polling showing Vance to be even more unpopular than the much derided Gov. Sarah Palin who was part of Sen. John McCain's losing 2008 presidential bid, the selection of the Ohio Republican by Trump opened the door, once again, to questions about the former president's lack of judgment.

Keep reading... Show less

'Unnerved' Trump allies fear his 'nuclear explosion' cost him a key state

Despite advice from his own inner circle, Donald Trump launched an attack on Gov. Brian Kemp (R-GA) that has his campaign staffers and allies trying to repair the damage two weeks later over fears he may have irreparably crippled his re-election chances.

According to a report from Politico, Trump's fury over a report that the popular Kemp's wife said she would write in her husband's name on her November ballot set off a chain of events that led to what some staffers called a "nuclear explosion" by the former president.

Despite advice from his aides to let it pass, as well as appeals to Kemp himself to help calm the waters, the former president used a speech in battleground Georgia to attack the popular southern governor, calling him, among other things, " ... a bad guy. He’s a disloyal guy. And he’s a very average governor.”

ALSO READ: Harris has figured out Trump’s greatest liability

As Politico's Natalie Allison, Meridith McGraw and Brittany Gibson are rerporting, those comments could cost him the state that was pivotal to Joe Biden defeating Trump in 2020.

The report states, "Trump’s allies, worried that feuding with the popular swing state governor could hurt Trump’s prospects in the state, encouraged him not to give the comment oxygen. Republicans in Georgia at the time were scrambling to further ease tensions between Trump and Kemp ahead of the November election, including at the April fundraiser luncheon in Buckhead that Trump had just attended."

Since that time, "The eruption unnerved Trump’s Republican allies — and marked a potential turning point in his presidential campaign in a key state. Kemp not only controls a vaunted turnout operation in Georgia but also has a track record of assembling the kind of coalition of traditionalist Republicans and independents that Trump will be counting on to carry the swing state in November."

With the report noting Trump's allies believed he "went too far," a Georgia GOP operative revealed, "The Trump campaign was calling around to legislators … asking them to post positive things about the rally on social media and were being told, ‘No.'"

Another Georgia Republican contributed, "I think what it does is it puts more pressure on the Trump organization in the state when you’re essentially operating without any help from the incumbent governor. And so the Trump team’s going to have a lot of pressure in Georgia to get it right.”

You can read more here.

Pennsylvania conservatives panicked Trump is 'not even trying' to win key voting bloc

Conservatives in Pennsylvania are growing increasingly alarmed that Donald Trump is not making a concerted effort to win the state's 19 Electoral College votes which could mean the difference between a presidential win like 2016 and a loss to now-President Joe Biden in 2020.

According to a report from the Financial Times by Edward Luce, there is a growing belief that the Trump campaign grew complacent when running against Biden and has made no adjustments now that the former president is facing Vice President Kamala Harris in November.

Keep reading... Show less

'Any other Republican candidate would be winning': GOP's Sununu unloads on Trump stumbles

Appearing on CNN "State of the Union" with host Jake Tapper, Gov. Chris Sununu (R-NH) did not express confidence that Donald Trump will prevail in November in his bid for a second presidential term.

The New Hampshire Republican, once the leading backer of Gov. Nikki Haley's bid for the GOP nomination until she dropped out, after which he switched sides, sat and watched as Tapper ran a clip of the former South Carolina governor attacking Trump for turning his campaign against Vice President Kamala Harris into a firehose of personal attacks including questioning whether she is "Black."

Following Haley stating, "I want this campaign to win. But the campaign is not going to win talking about crowd sizes. It’s not going to win talking about what race Kamala Harris is. It’s not going to win talking about whether she is dumb,” CNN's Tapper asked, "Who is right here? Haley or Trump?"

ALSO READ: Donald Trump deep in debt while foreign money keeps coming: disclosure

"Well it isn't Donald Trump in this case," Sununu shot back. "Look, as Nicki wouldn't point out because she was the alternative, almost any other Republican candidate would be winning this race by ten points. And so the message is very clear: if you stick to the issues, if you stick to what matters, this should be an easy race for Donald Trump — it really should."

Asked later by the CNN host about Trump's highly controversial comments about war heroes who received the Congressional Medal of Hour that led to the Veterans of Foreign Wars slamming the former president for making "asinine" remarks, Sununu agreed.

"They were asinine, there's no doubt about that again," He stated. "I don't think they're the first asinine comments, former president Trump has ever made."

Watch below or at the link.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump campaign under threat of 'digital war' from far-right influencers

As if Donald Trump's presidential campaign doesn't have enough problems as Vice President Kamala Harris races past him in the polls with the presidential election less than 80 days away, he now faces the threat of a "war" coming from the far-right unhappy that he isn't catering to their demands that he adopt more of their positions.

According to a report from the Washington Post, far-right influencers like extremist Nick Fuentes are telling their followers to "bedevil" the Trump campaign for change with threats of a "digital war" and the possible withholding of their votes in November.

Keep reading... Show less

'There has to be a shakeup': Trump campaign in turmoil as he looks for someone to blame

Despite claims of calm emanating from Donald Trump's presidential campaign staff, they are continually finding themselves at odds with the former president who continues to ignore strategic plans put together for him to grapple with the candidacy of Vice President Kamala Harris.


According to a report from the Washington Post, Trump's campaign inner circle recently saw a presentation on their plans for the 2024 election presented to select reporters go down the drain almost immediately when he went off-script and launched into personal attacks on Harris.

The report notes that up until mid-summer the campaign had been "drama-free" but the decision by President Joe Biden to step aside caught everyone flat-footed including the former president who is now looking for someone to blame as things have fallen apart.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump claims Harris did not pick Shapiro as her running mate 'because he’s Jewish'

WILKES-BARRE— For the first time in 2024, former President Donald Trump rallied supporters in Northeast Pennsylvania on Saturday, telling an audience at the Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza that Vice President Kamala Harris did not choose Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro as her running mate “because he’s Jewish.”

Shapiro was under consideration to be Harris’ vice presidential pick, but she ultimately chose Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

Keep reading... Show less