Marjorie Taylor Greene

'Pure congressional mayhem': Analyst left shocked by scenes in House contempt hearing

A congressional hearing ended in "mayhem" as Republicans began the process of holding Hunter Biden in contempt for not complying with a subpoena to sit for a closed-door deposition.

President Joe Biden's son had agreed to testify in a public hearing last month, which Republicans rejected, and Hunter Biden briefly appeared Wednesday morning at a hearing of the House Oversight Committee before abruptly departing as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) claimed her allotted time.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene furious as Jamie Raskin says Ashli Babbitt's death is on Trump

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) lashed out Wednesday after Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) pointed out that Jan. 6 protester Ashli Babbitt was not murdered.

During a House Oversight hearing to consider contempt of Congress charges for Hunter Biden, Greene claimed that Babbitt had been a "murder" victim on Jan. 6, 2021, because she was shot while breaching the U.S. Capitol.

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Ex-GOP official thinks Democrats plotted Hunter Biden face-off with Republicans

Former Rep. David Jolly (R-FL) accused the Democrats of pulling a fast one on the House Oversight and Reform Committee Republicans Wednesday when Hunter Biden appeared unexpectedly at a meeting discussing charging him with contempt of Congress.

"A remarkable day on Capitol Hill," he told MSNBC after the incident unfolded.

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Listen: Trump’s top Senate allies try – and fail – to defend his immunity claim

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump is demanding a federal court grant him blanket immunity from prosecution for anything he did during his four years in the White House.

But even some of Trump’s top allies in Congress rejected Trump’s latest legal claim.

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'This trial date will stick': George Conway thinks Trump's immunity fight will end quickly

George Conway confidently predicted Donald Trump would quickly lose his immunity battle and stand trial as scheduled in his Washington, D.C., election subversion case.

The former president's attorney argued Tuesday that he should be broadly immune from criminal prosecution because he had not been convicted in his impeachment trial by the Senate following the Jan. 6 insurrection, but Conway told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" the three-judge appeals court panel might already have decided to deny that claim.

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Judge effectively neuters Trump's 'grandstanding' in upcoming defamation trial

A federal judge effectively neutered most of Donald Trump's defenses in his upcoming defamation trial.

The former president's attorneys had been preparing for his second defamation trial involving journalist E. Jean Carroll as if the first one never happened in hopes of clearing his name after a jury found him liable for sexual assault, but U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan issued a new order severely limiting the parameters of this case, reported The Daily Beast.

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National Review begs GOP voters to turn on 'grotesquely selfish' Trump

The right-wing National Review published an editorial on Wednesday in which it all but begged conservatives to find someone besides former President Donald Trump to be the party's nominee.

The crux of the editorial attacks the common conceit among Trump supporters that the only thing he's done wrong has been to write "mean tweets," and the editors argue that his actions leading up to and during the January 6th Capitol riots are the main argument against his candidacy.

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Morning Joe cracks up at idea of Trump delivering his own closing argument

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough burst into laughter at Donald Trump's claim that he would deliver his own closing argument in his New York fraud trial.

The former president vowed to speak up for himself in the $370 million civil fraud trial later this week, days after his attorneys argued before a Washington, D.C., appeals court that he should be broadly immune from criminal prosecution, and the "Morning Joe" host could barely deliver that news without laughing.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene broke an election law. Her donors — not MTG — paid the fine.

The Federal Election Commission recently fined Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene $12,000 after determining the Georgia congresswoman personally violated an election law after illegally fundraising for a conservative super PAC.

But Greene’s campaign donors — not Greene herself — are footing the bill, according to an image of the payment check that Raw Story obtained from the FEC.

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Trump lawyers 'painted themselves into a corner' with 'utter nonsense' claim: expert

Donald Trump's lawyers "painted themselves into a corner" by staking an absolute position on presidential immunity, according to a legal expert.

The former president's attorney, John Sauer, argued Tuesday before a seemingly skeptical three-judge appeals court panel that the Constitution does not allow for criminal prosecutions of chief executives unless they have been both impeached and convicted by Congress, but legal analyst Chuck Rosenberg told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" why that was a mistake.

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House Republicans are 'already unraveling' less than two weeks into new year: GOP aide

It's less than two weeks into the new year, but Politico's Playbook reports that tensions among Republicans in the House of Representatives are already boiling over.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is taking heat from hardliners in his caucus such as Rep. Bob Good (R-VA), who are demanding a government shutdown to extract concessions from Democrats in the White House and the Senate.

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Wisconsin judge under investigation for jailing man over dispute with courthouse employee

This article first appeared on Wisconsin Watch and is republished under a Creative Commons license.

Hortonville, Wis., contractor Tyler Barth was more than halfway through his 18 months on felony probation for attempting to elude an officer when the judge ordered him into court.

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Trump would be 'completely unconstrained' if courts buy his immunity claims: Ex-WH lawyers

Former White House attorneys warned The New Republic's Greg Sargent that courts would be giving former President Donald Trump a free license to engage in nearly unlimited corruption were they to buy into arguments made by his attorneys this week about presidential immunity.

Although these lawyers did not believe that the courts ruling in favor of Trump in this case would let him get away with assassinating political opponents absent a conviction in an impeachment trial in the United States Senate, they did argue that Trump would nonetheless return to office with dangerously broad powers that would be ripe for blatant abuse.

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