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Trump continues to 'babble at clouds' as he suffers his 'worst week yet': columnist

USA Today columnist Rex Huppke on Friday offered up a review of former President Donald Trump's week on the campaign trail that was jam-packed with scathing derision.

Huppke declared it Trump's "worst week yet" and proceeded to ridicule the former president's Thursday press conference in which he was supposed to deliver a policy speech about the economy, but ended up devolving into his standard airing of grievances against his various political foes.

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'Dog owners should not feel safe': Columnist flags new Vance attack on childless Americans

Sen. J.D. Vance used the words "essential weapon" to praise the Heritage Foundation president's new book which includes a tirade against a surprising subject: dog parks.

This point appears in a new analysis from Salon's Amanda Marcotte as she argued both American "cat ladies" and dog owners should be concerned about Donald Trump's running mate's views.

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'They’ll renew anything': Dems laugh as James Comer vows to investigate Walz foreign ties

House Republicans' Friday announcement of an investigation into Vice President Kamala Harris' running mate spurred social media yawns from Democrats who said they have seen that show before.

The House Oversight committee took to X to share news that Rep. James Comer (R-KY) — who led the investigation into President Joe Biden's alleged foreign ties — would investigate Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) and his alleged foreign ties.

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'Growing chatter' at Mar-a-Lago that Trump wants two campaign heads to 'kill each other'

The re-hiring of former Donald Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski to help shore up a struggling re-election effort is being dismissed as not reflecting on the existing campaign managers, but there might be financial considerations in play.

On Thursday, an announcement that Lewandowski and several other veterans from the successful 2016 campaign were being brought back into the fold led to speculation that Trump co-campaign heads Susie Wiles and Chris LaCivita might be on the way out.

According to Tara Palmeri, who posted on X on Thursday as the hiring was being announced, "Lewandowski told allies over the weekend that he was coming back as a campaign chairman essentially a layer above Wiles and LaCivita. This comes as Trump, superstitious and nostalgic, wants the team that helped him win in 2016 back."

Following up at Puck, Palmeri wrote that Wiles will likely survive, but LaCivita may be under the gun over the amount he has been billing for his services.

RELATED: 'Dump those traitors': MAGA fans revolt and demand Trump fire top campaign managers

As she explained, a source close to Lewandowski told her, "Susie is a survivor; she’s not going anywhere. But then you have LaCivita and Corey Lewandowski, two alpha men. It’s like Trump just wants them to kill each other and for one to win so he doesn’t have to actually fire anyone.”

She went on to add, that there is "chatter" around Mar-a-Lago about LaCivita and money.

"One obvious vulnerability facing LaCivita is his astronomical fee. As Trump stews over his fading poll numbers and whether a once easily winnable election is slipping away, there has been growing chatter in some corners of Mar-a-Lago about the $50,000 that LaCivita’s firm, Advanced Strategies, collects from the campaign and R.N.C. each month, which is included in the nearly $1.7 million he’s invoiced the campaign so far this year for various services like placed media, political strategy consulting, and video production, up from the $1.65 million he billed last year," she wrote.

Whether it is related to changes at the top of the campaign structure or the fact that Vice President Kamala Harris is riding a wave of enthusiasm and campaign contributions as she has surged past the former president in the polls, Palmeri wrote that LaCivita has undergone a mood change since the RNC convention in Milwaukee.

"The typically jovial LaCivita is now quiet and moody, I hear, a dramatic change from the heady days of the Republican National Convention, last month, when he was boasting about the size of his hotel suite," she reported.

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'Could Republicans dump Trump?' Conservative says it's time to ask about mental fitness

The Republican Party can no longer ignore that former President Donald Trump, Republican nominee and convicted felon, appears to be losing the thread, a conservative analyst argued Friday.

Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin condemned political coverage of the controversial candidate and demanded a new narrative similar to that faced earlier this summer by President Joe Biden.

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'Caught on tape': Trump and J.D. Vance said to be alienating women with recorded remarks

Women are more reliable voters than men, and they just don't like Donald Trump and J.D. Vance's antics, according to a new report.

The former president and his running mate have long histories of, in Trump's case, saying vulgar and sexist remarks about women, and in Vance's case, describing women in pseudoscientific terms that focus on their abilities to bear and rear children – and polls suggest women strongly prefer Kamala Harris, reported Axios.

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Trump making crucial error – again – heading into debate: ex-president's White House aide

One of Donald Trump's former White House aides cautioned that he was setting up Kamala Harris to make a positive impression at their first debate.

The former president has frustrated his campaign team and other Republicans by personally attacking Harris as unintelligent and unable to talk off the cuff, and his former White House director of strategic communications Alyssa Farah Griffin told CNN that Trump was setting expectations too low for voters who may not know much about her.

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'Sir, you need to shut up': GOP pollster says Trump running out of time to turn it around

Kamala Harris continues to gain momentum in her sprint to the White House, and one veteran Republican pollster says Donald Trump is running out of time to turn things around.

The former president made two public appearances Thursday at his golf resort in New Jersey, where he offended military veterans with remarks about the Medal of Honor and asserted that he was "entitled" to insult vice president Kamala Harris, and GOP pollster Frank Luntz said the Trump campaign must stop him from turning off more voters with that sort of talk.

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Harris applauded for proposing the first-ever ban on price gouging

Economic justice advocates on Thursday applauded the Harris campaign's announcement the Vice President Kamala Harris is planning to unveil a historic ban on food and grocery price gouging amid widespread discontent about costs that have ballooned by 26% in the last five years.

The Democratic presidential candidate is expected to unveil the proposal for the first-ever federal price gouging ban at a rally in Raleigh, North Carolina on Friday, detailing plans to direct the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to impose "harsh penalties" on companies that hike food prices to pad their profits.

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Rights group gives Harris its first-ever presidential endorsement

Facing the specter of draconian policies including mass deportations of undocumented immigrants under a potential second term for former U.S. President Donald Trump, a major progressive Latine-led advocacy group on Thursday announced its first-ever general election presidential endorsement, for Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.

"Our democracy is at a crossroads. Former President Trump and extremist politicians have promised mass deportations, the erosion of fundamental rights, and four more years of white supremacist ideology," said Theo Oshiro, executive director of Make the Road Action, in a statement announcing the group's endorsement.

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Trump says he's 'entitled to personal attacks' against Harris

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump said Thursday he sees no need to switch the tactics or tone of his bid for the White House now that Vice President Kamala Harris is the Democratic nominee instead of President Joe Biden.

Speaking during a press conference at his golf club in New Jersey, the former president began with 45 minutes of comments on a myriad of issues before he took more than a dozen questions from reporters.

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How Democrats are building momentum for a bigger youth vote

WASHINGTON — Democratic and left-leaning youth organizing groups have seized on a new opportunity to rally younger voters now that Vice President Kamala Harris is their party’s presidential nominee.

Young adult voters — including millions of Gen Zers — could be pivotal in determining the outcome of the race in which the 59-year-old Democrat vies for the Oval Office against former President Donald Trump, 78, the GOP presidential nominee. Members of Gen Z eligible to vote are 18 to 27 years old this year.

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'He wants us to say it wrong': CNN panel derails as GOP strategist mispronounces 'Kamala'

A CNN panel ahead of former President Donald Trump's press conference at his Bedminster golf club grew tense and combative after theGrio correspondent Natasha Alford called out a Republican strategist for both mispronouncing Vice President Kamala Harris' name, and falsely blaming a number of longstanding national policy challenges on her four years in the vice presidency.

"Trump's out here doing press conferences, and Harris is interviewing with her running mate," said GOP strategist Scott Jennings. "We need to know more about this candidacy because of the way it came about and the fact that it's never received a single vote ever in a primary."

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