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'Recipe for trouble': Key GOP senator comes out against Trump's voter restriction effort

President Donald Trump's SAVE Act, an aggressive attempt to curtail voting rights, has earned a Republican opponent in the Senate.

The bill would place nationalized voter ID requirements, put draconian new restrictions on the process of registering to vote, and require voter rolls be purged more aggressively using an infamously unreliable Homeland Security system that frequently flags citizens as noncitizens. It has already earned support from almost the entire Republican Senate caucus, but Republicans currently lack the votes to either overcome a Democratic filibuster or change the Senate rules to avert one.

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Busted: Nicki Minaj's MAGA rise powered by 'sophisticated army of bots'

One of MAGA's most prominent supporters seems to have gained notoriety within the movement on the backs of social media bots, according to a report.

Nicki Minaj, a Grammy Award-winning rapper, has spent the last year or more steadily shifting her brand toward MAGA and away from traditional pop culture. That shift has included attacks against prominent Democrats like California Gov. Gavin Newsom and repeating MAGA talking points about former President Joe Biden's health and his economy. Minaj was also present at the White House for the launch of President Donald Trump's so-called "Trump Accounts" and was pictured on the red carpet alongside the first lady for the premiere of her self-titled documentary.

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'All bets are off' if appeals court wades into Judge Cannon's Trump cover-up: MS NOW

An order by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon to keep special counsel Jack Smith's investigation report into the classified document case of President Donald Trump under wraps may face legal challenges that could reverse her decision. Cannon, a Donald Trump-appointed judge accused of running interference for the president, ruled that Smith was illegally appointed and his investigation invalid. She characterized the report's compilation as "a concerning breach of the spirit of the Dismissal Order." However, legal analyst Lisa Rubin noted that while the Department of Justice and indictment-affected parties did not contest Cannon's ruling, two public interest groups—American Oversight and the Knight First Amendment Institute—have attempted to intervene. Though Cannon denied their intervention request, both groups are appealing. If the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals determines these groups have standing in the case, Cannon's order could be reversed.

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Gold medal-winning women's hockey team declines Trump's State of Union invite

The U.S. women's Olympic hockey team declined an invitation to attend President Donald Trump's State of the Union speech on Tuesday. USA Hockey released a statement expressing gratitude for the invitation and acknowledging the team's gold medal achievement, though the statement was widely interpreted as a polite rejection. Social media commentators suggested the team's response amounted to effectively telling Trump to "go to hell." The rejection comes after Trump expressed reluctance about inviting the women's team during a phone call with the men's hockey team, which also won gold at the Olympics. Trump told the men's team he would need to invite the women's team, adding that if he didn't, he "probably would be impeached."

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Key witness to ICE killing dies in car crash

Joshua Orta, a key witness in the controversial ICE killing of 23-year-old U.S. citizen Rubén Ray Martínez, died Saturday in an unrelated vehicle crash in San Antonio, Texas. Orta's death raises concerns about the ongoing investigation into Martínez's death, which occurred last March but was not reported by the Department of Homeland Security at the time. DHS claimed an ICE agent shot Martínez in self-defense after he struck the agent with a vehicle. However, Orta, who was present during the encounter, disputed this account, stating neither he nor Martínez resisted ICE officers. Alex Stamm, lawyer for Martínez's mother, emphasized that Orta's testimony was critical and called for all evidence to be made public. DHS maintained its original account of the incident following Orta's death.

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Trump suggests he wants to send Americans 'that don't work' to other countries

President Donald Trump suggested at an Angel Families event Monday that he would like to send unemployed Americans to other countries. Trump claimed other nations have sent their undesirable residents and criminals to the U.S., taking advantage of what he characterized as weak border policies. He stated he understands the strategy and would implement it if given the opportunity. Trump quoted world leaders as saying they saved "hundreds of millions of dollars" by emptying their populations onto the U.S. Angel Families, whose members have lost loved ones to crimes committed by individuals in the country unlawfully, were present at the event. Trump also revisited debunked claims about the 2020 election being rigged, telling attendees that without election fraud, "every single one of the people in this room right now would not be here."

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Trump's massive banner set off alarms for psychologist

Dr. John Gartner, a psychologist and psychotherapist, expressed concern about the Trump administration's decision to display a massive banner featuring President Donald Trump's face on the Department of Justice building. During an appearance on "The Daily Beast Podcast," Gartner characterized the move as "particularly creepy" and argued it represents another sign of Trump's declining cognitive health. He suggested Trump may be experiencing "sundowning," a phenomenon associated with dementia, citing Trump's disinhibited behavior and irregular sleep patterns. Gartner noted Trump's lack of intellectual curiosity and concentration, emphasizing his primary interest is self-aggrandizement and displaying his name and image. Gartner underscored the disturbing nature of placing the banner on the Justice Department building, given Trump's documented efforts to persecute political enemies while protecting allies and removing names from Epstein files.

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Mike Johnson admits Trump's tariffs are dead on arrival in Congress

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) said Monday that he doubted Congress would pass any legislation to reinstate President Donald Trump's tariff policy following the Supreme Court decision last week that the president's levies were illegal.

He described how it would be unlikely for lawmakers to reverse that decision, Politico reported.

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Attorney amazed as GOP deposition scheme backfires on Trump

Former Florida state attorney Dave Aronberg discussed how the Republican Party's attempt to downplay Leslie Wexner's deposition backfired during an appearance on the "All Rise News" podcast. The House Oversight Committee held a nearly five-hour deposition of Wexner, former CEO of Victoria's Secret, with no Republicans in attendance. Wexner denied involvement in Jeffrey Epstein's crimes, claiming he was "conned" out of nearly $200 million paid to Epstein for real estate and tax services. His name appears on a Department of Justice document listing him as a potential co-conspirator. Aronberg characterized the GOP's silence as a "self-inflicted wound," noting that concealment efforts only increase public interest. He also highlighted how Wexner's testimony contradicts Trump's claim that nobody knew about Epstein's activities, citing Trump's own 1999 New York magazine interview acknowledging Epstein's known behavior.

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Republicans criticize Trump at a half-empty Principles First summit

Current and former Republicans criticized President Donald Trump at the sixth annual Principles First summit held outside Washington, D.C., over the weekend. The event, estimated to draw around 750 attendees, was reportedly about "half empty," with no currently elected Republican officials in attendance. Former Republican lawmaker Joe Walsh called Trump "everything our founders feared" and described his MAGA movement as an "authoritarian-embracing cult" that threatens democracy. Retired Gen. Mark Hertling, former commander of U.S. military forces in Europe, noted that U.S. allies questioned whether American institutions "can ever be trusted again," stating the nation's institutions, alliances, credibility, and values have been compromised. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie cited a poll showing 25 percent of Republicans disapprove of Trump's job performance, predicting the summit's attendance will double by next February after the midterms.

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Unearthed email shows Trump's DOJ described Epstein's death as 'murder'

A 2020 email unearthed from the Justice Department's 3.5 million Epstein files shows a DOJ attorney referring to Jeffrey Epstein's death as a "murder," contradicting the official suicide ruling. Epstein was found dead in his cell on August 10, 2019, and Chief Medical Examiner Barbara Sampson ruled it a suicide six days later, despite oddities surrounding the circumstances. An Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of New York wrote that the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner had signed a confidentiality agreement "in connection with the investigation into the murder of Jeffrey Epstein." This reference came nearly a year after the suicide ruling. The revelation occurred during Trump's first term and conflicts with a DOJ memo released last year concluding Epstein died by suicide. Journalists expressed shock at the discovery, with critics noting Trump's DOJ was investigating the death as a murder in 2020.


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'Disgusting': Republicans turn on House colleague amid 'predator' accusations

As more revelations come to light for Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-TX), a growing number of Republicans have called on him to step down.

Gonzales was reportedly having an affair with Regina Santos-Aviles, who ran his congressional branch office in Uvalde, and died after setting herself on fire last year. Newly revealed text messages show that Gonzales pressured Santos-Aviles to send him "sexy pics," which appeared to make her uncomfortable. Both the congressman and his deceased staffer were married.

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Explosion of protests in Trump 2.0 prove experts were dead wrong about America: analysis

America is in full revolt against President Donald Trump, according to a new analysis.

New data revealed a staggering reality: President Donald Trump's second term triggered more than 40,000 protests by Jan. 31 — quadruple the roughly 10,000 that erupted during the same timeframe of his first presidency, Zack Beauchamp, senior correspondent at Vox, wrote Monday.

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