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Lauren Boebert

Trump lawyer's 'meaningless' grilling of witness had 'little bearing on the facts': expert

Former President Donald Trump's defense lawyer Todd Blanche is engaging in "meaningless" histrionics with his latest cross-examination of Michael Cohen, argued Pace University law professor and former New York prosecutor Bennett Gershman in conversation with Salon's Marina Villeneuve.

Cohen, Trump's former attorney and fixer, has been the star witness of the Manhattan criminal hush money trial, and has been subject to several days of intense cross-examination.

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'Mean Girls' moment breaks out in court as Alina Habba gets in George Conway's face

MSNBC host Katy Tur observed what she said was a "Mean Girls" moment in the courtroom where Donald Trump is on trial.

Trump faces 34 felony counts in Manhattan involving the falsification of business records surrounding a hush-money scheme to silence a story about a sexual relationship.

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Delay, delay: Lauren Boebert keeping personal finances secret until after GOP primary

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) has requested an extension to disclose her personal finances — and do so well after her competitive June 25 primary election.

Boebert, one of the U.S. House’s most high-profile members, was supposed to disclose details about her 2023 finances on Wednesday, including assets, income, debt, royalties and business agreements, such as book deals.

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Testy Trump lawyer gets crickets as he jokes about Congress members in court

Manhattan Criminal Court — Former President Donald Trump's attorney Todd Blanche heard crickets in the courtroom when he took a jab at members of Congress in front of members of Congress.

Blanche Thursday became testy as he cross-examined former Trump fixer Michael Cohen, the star witness in Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's criminal hush money case whom the defense attorney sought to discredit.

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'MAGA mother of the year': Boebert roasted for attending Trump trial but not her son's

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) is among the latest batch of Republican lawmakers who made a pilgrimage to New York City to sit in on former President Donald Trump's criminal trial in Manhattan.

But her presence there was particularly revealing to a lot of people on social media, because very recently, Boebert's own son Tyler had to appear in court on felony charges for criminal possession of identity documents, strapped for cash and complaining to the judge he couldn't afford a lawyer.

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Boebert stares down Trump enemy as she sparks mockery with court appearance

Reps. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) and Matt Gaetz (R-FL) were among those in the audience to support Donald Trump on Thursday — and the Colorado Republican was reportedly staring daggers at the former president's critics.

Photos were taken of the lawmakers positioned directly behind the ex-president as his trial began and Trump's former lawyer, Michael Cohen, continued his testimony.

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'No!' Trump lawyer slapped down by hush money judge amid rocky Michael Cohen cross

Manhattan Criminal Court — Laughter erupted Thursday during former President Donald Trump's criminal hush money trial when his attorney made a plea to the judge — and received a swift and stern "No."

Todd Blanche asked to approach Judge Juan Merchan within the first 15 minutes of his second day of cross-examining Trump's former fixer Michael Cohen.

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Exclusive: Meet Marjorie Taylor Greene's potential primary opponents

POLK COUNTY, Ga. — Northwest Georgia is such a deep red part of the country that sometimes Democrats don’t even bother taking a shot at the congressional seat in the state’s 14th Congressional District.

That was the case in 2016. And when conservative firebrand Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) came along in 2020, she captured nearly 75 percent of the vote after a primary runoff and cruised to reelection in 2022.

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Lauren Boebert's son tells judge he's 'working things out' to afford attorney: report

Tyler Boebert, Rep. Lauren Boebert's (R-CO) eldest son, charged with I.D. theft and going on shopping sprees by swiping stolen credit cards, says he's still in between lawyers.

“I have now sent...um, I can’t remember what...like, the document to sign up for a public defender," Tyler told 9th Judicial District Judge John Neiley Thursday in court, Westword reported. "I’ve sent it in. I haven’t gotten a message back, but it was very recently. It was only a couple days ago."

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'Fake Christian:' Boebert slammed for attack on charity helping homeless migrants

Rep. Lauren Boebert's Christian values came under scrutiny this week after the Colorado Republican hurled insults at a local initiative to find housing for homeless migrants.

Boebert faced immediate backlash after publishing Wednesday morning an X rant against a hotline Denver residents can call to connect with the nonprofit Hope Has No Borders, which pairs migrants with host families.

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'Ridiculous,’ ‘chaos,’ ‘foolish,’ ‘turmoil’: Senate GOP smites Marjorie Taylor Greene

WASHINGTON — Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is making the Republican Party look ridiculous.

That’s according to Republican senators.

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Boebert complains about 'very disrespectful' protesters who chanted 'Beetlejuice' at her

When Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) joined Reps. James Comer (R-KY), Byron Donalds (R-FL) and Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) on a visit to George Washington University, campus protesters had a unique chant especially for her.

The Daily Beast recently reported that Boebert's visit to the campus — where students had set up an encampment to demand their school divest its endowment from corporations with business ties to Israel — prompted protesters to chant "Beetlejuice" at her.

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Lauren Boebert blasted as 'feral breed of conservative' and her own 'worst enemy'

Colorado Republican Lauren Boebert has jumped from her own district and into another part of the state in an effort to keep a seat in Congress — but one columnist on Wednesday said it was she, not the area she covered, that was the problem.

Writing for the Los Angeles Times on Wednesday, Mark Z. Barabak called the congresswoman "one of a feral breed of conservatives attacking Congress from within."

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