Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

MSN

Kristi Noem's 'dirty little secret' on border security exposed by conservative outlet

President Donald Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem have repeatedly bragged that the Trump administration is allowing "zero" unauthorized immigrants to cross the border into the United States. But a new scoop from the conservative Washington Examiner reveals that's not true — and some immigrants are indeed being released into the country after being apprehended.

"Although the number of border crossers let into the interior of the country is significantly smaller than it was during the Biden administration, that some illegal immigrants have been released into the U.S. at all appears to contradict President Donald Trump’s claim during the State of the Union address, as well as numerous statements by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, that no one had been let in since early last summer," reported Anna Giaritelli.

Keep reading... Show less

Ex-DOJ attorney delivers sobering reality check after Supreme Court deals Trump big loss

Former Justice Department attorney Kim Wehle cautioned against complacency following the Supreme Court's 6-3 ruling against Trump's tariffs, arguing the decision does not signal a meaningful check on presidential power expansion. While the Court struck down the tariffs in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, Wehle warned the ruling represents "a check—but not a constitutional reset." She cited three concerns: the decision was not unanimous, it benefited "the very rich," and the Court has yet to meaningfully constrain Trump's authority. Wehle emphasized that the rule of law depends on sustained judicial fidelity to principle, not isolated opinions. She called for holding justices accountable by praising constitutional adherence and persistently criticizing betrayals of law. Wehle stressed vigilance is necessary to determine whether the majority is guided by the Constitution or politics.

Watch video below.

Keep reading... Show less

Tucker Carlson hit with scathing attack from irate ambassador over 'disgusting' conspiracy

Israel's ambassador to the U.S. unleashed a blistering attack on Tucker Carlson Friday, blasting the former Fox News host's rhetoric as offensive and deeply troubling.

Carlson has repeatedly suggested that Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, is pulling the strings on Trump's intense Iran pressure campaign — a claim Leiter flatly rejected.

Keep reading... Show less

GOP strategist bewildered by Republicans' 'terrible' move to haul in Clintons to testify

A former Trump strategist expressed confusion Friday over House Republicans’ decision to subpoena former President Bill Clinton, questioning what lawmakers hoped to accomplish.

Appearing on Anderson Cooper 360, GOP strategist David Urban suggested the effort produced few results.

Keep reading... Show less

'Needless display of brute punishment': WSJ editorial rips into Trump's war with AI firm

The Wall Street Journal editorial board sharply condemned President Donald Trump on Friday for ordering the federal government to blackball Anthropic, an artificial intelligence firm that had refused to relax its safety rules to let the Defense Department deploy automated surveillance and military strikes.

Trump proclaimed in a Truth Social rant earlier in the day that the "Leftwing nut job" firm, which operates the Claude AI model, was forcing the Pentagon to "obey their Terms of Service instead of our Constitution" and vowed that all federal contracts with the company would be phased out.

Keep reading... Show less

Pam Bondi under fire from judges over 'eyebrow-raising' social media posts

Two federal judges are raising concerns about Attorney General Pam Bondi’s use of social media to publicize a string of arrests tied to the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota.

In a recent order, U.S. Magistrate Judge Dulce Foster said Bondi’s posts on X – which included names and, in many cases, photographs of defendants shortly after their arrests – “violated a court order” sealing the cases, Politico reported Friday. The criticism came in connection with the prosecution of Nitzana Flores, who is accused of attacking two Border Patrol agents during a scuffle.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump scolds Republicans for calling controversial legislation by its official name

President Donald Trump erupted at Republican lawmakers on Friday over their failure to use his preferred name for the voter eligibility bill. The legislation's official name is the SAVE Act (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act), but Trump demanded Republicans call it the "SAVE America Act," claiming the alternative name is "much more potent and descriptive." Trump posted in all caps on Truth Social: "IT'S 'SAVE AMERICA ACT,' NOT 'SAVE ACT.' REPUBLICANS MUST START USING THE TERM." The bill requires voters to provide proof of citizenship to register, a requirement that already exists legally. Critics warn the measure could significantly depress voter turnout, particularly affecting the 52 percent of registered voters without unexpired passports and the 11 percent without access to birth certificates.

Watch the video below.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge slams brakes on Trump's 'dystopian nightmare' to lock up refugees

A federal judge in Minnesota has blocked President Donald Trump's plan to arrest thousands of legal refugees for questioning and re-evaluation, calling the plan a "dystopian nightmare."

The order was first reported by Chris Geidner, who runs the Law Dork blog.

Keep reading... Show less

MAGA in shock watching James Carville's crude midterm skit: 'Needs a straitjacket!'

Legendary Democratic strategist James Carville caused a stir Friday when he acted out a wild political fantasy that ended in sweeping Republican defeats and President Donald Trump "throwing feces at the wall" in the Lincoln Bedroom.

The veteran operative pretended to take over an anchor's desk, transforming himself into a one-man election-night extravaganza complete with imaginary correspondents reporting from battleground states.

Keep reading... Show less

Bill Clinton grilled on bombshell Epstein-jacuzzi photo during 6-hour deposition: report

Former President Bill Clinton denied having any knowledge of Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes and pushed back on allegations tied to a widely circulated image of him in a jacuzzi during a historic deposition before the House Oversight Committee.

Under more than six hours of questioning, Clinton said he “had no idea” about Epstein’s criminal activity during what he described as their “brief acquaintance,” according to CNN.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump may hurl 'vulnerable' fall guy  overboard to fight Epstein heat: NYT reporter

President Donald Trump has an easy scapegoat to throw under the bus if he continues to feel the heat from the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking scandal, New York Times reporter Michelle Goldberg told MS NOW's Ari Melber on Friday: Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

Lutnick, a billionaire who has been at the forefront of defending Trump's tariff policies, has been caught lying about the extent of his relationship with the deceased financier pedophile, and even top GOP lawmakers are suggesting he could be brought in for questioning.

Keep reading... Show less

DOJ admits yanking photo of embattled Commerce Secretary with Epstein

The Justice Department admitted Thursday that it removed a file containing a photograph of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick with Jeffrey Epstein from the official Epstein database. The photo, discovered by jmail's searchable Epstein Gmail archive, shows both men on Little St. James island and carries DOJ file number EFTA01230639, which yields no results in the official database. A DOJ official claimed the image was part of a batch flagged for nudity and pulled for review with redactions, insisting "no files are being deleted." Lutnick previously stated he visited the island only for a family picnic with his children and nannies. However, Justice Department releases revealed Lutnick and Epstein exchanged emails years after Epstein pleaded guilty to soliciting a minor in 2008, arranging calls and lunches on the island.

Watch the video below.

Keep reading... Show less

Kristi Noem caught covering up key flaw in her own security policy for months

A policy championed by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to speed up Transportation Security Administration lines at airports in fact had a key security flaw — but when it was reported to her, the Department classified it and kept it buried for months, reported the Wall Street Journal on Friday.

The policy is one of the few undertaken by Noem's DHS that has enjoyed considerable bipartisan support: ending requirements for people to remove their shoes at airport security lines, a policy enacted after a thwarted shoe bomb plot over two decades ago that the traveling public has long considered a nuisance.

Keep reading... Show less