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'Animal instinct for weakness': columnist explains how Trump keeps Republicans in line

Former President Donald Trump's dubious displays of dominance fail in almost every arena except the one that he's determined to command; the Republican party, according to a new political analysis.

Atlantic columnist McCay Coppins penned a piece Thursday arguing Trump's purported ability to "dominate" has only ever proven true among his fellow Republicans.

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'Staggering': Another high-ranking Republican announces she won't run again

Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) announced on Thursday she will not be seeking re-election this year — adding to a long list of Republican members unwilling to stay in office.

Rodgers represented the far eastern part of Washington State in Congress, including the Spokane area.

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'Colorado will lose': Legal analysts shocked by how bad Supreme Court argument went

Legal analysts anticipate that Colorado lost at the U.S. Supreme Court in the arguments for Trump v. Anderson on Thursday.

Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann pointed to the way that the questions were going and anticipated the ruling would be a "win" even if the court's Democrat-appointed judges affirmed Colorado's decision.

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‘You sound like an idiot’:' Anti-Trump protester schools GOP senator on insurrection

A Republican senator was sent scurrying away from his own news interview outside the Supreme Court Thursday when an anti-Donald Trump protester decided to explain, quite loudly, her understanding of the word “insurrection.”

The angry protester slapped back at Sen. Roger Marshall (R-KS) after he spoke out in support of Trump — whose eligibility to appear on presidential ballots was being argued before the nation's highest court — and tried to compare the riots on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to migrants who daily cross the southern border.

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Alito rushed in to save 'failing' Trump lawyer during hearing: legal experts

Donald Trump's lawyer, Jonathan Mitchell, had a rough start to the arguments in Trump v. Anderson on Thursday before the U.S. Supreme Court, legal analysts noted.

Live-tweeting the proceeding, several attorneys couldn't help but notice that Mitchell was struggling.

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Listen Live: Supreme Court hears arguments in Trump's Colorado ballot case

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear emergency arguments in the Trump v. Anderson case on Thursday, after the Colorado state Supreme Court removed Donald Trump from the state ballot.

Other states have since followed suit, citing Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which declares that no officer of the Constitution can serve if he or she has engaged in insurrection against the United States government. The lower court in Colorado ruled that Trump was guilty of insurrection after attempting to thwart the peaceful transfer of power after losing the 2020 election and encouraging a violent attack on the U.S. Capitol.

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Tommy Tuberville forgets name of the Kansas City Chiefs while trashing Biden's memory

Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) had an awkward moment to forget something: in the middle of trashing someone else's memory.

Tuberville has been after President Joe Biden saying that he can't "remember names." It has been part of the Republican Party's campaign to attack Biden, purportedly for having some kind of degenerative brain disease.

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'Wow': Trump lawyers send 'crazy' reply after Judge Engoron asks about possible perjury

Attorneys for former President Donald Trump in his $370 million civil fraud trial Wednesday called Judge Arthur Engoron’s demand for information about Allen Weisselberg’s potential perjury plea deal “unprecedented, inappropriate and troubling."

Engoron Monday demanded information about a New York Times report that Weisselberg may have perjured himself during testimony given in the civil fraud trial, but attorney Clifford Robert retorted he had no reason to do so.

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Engoron urged by prosecutors not to delay Trump ruling after perjury plea deal report

The New York Attorney General’s office urged Arthur Engoron Wednesday not to delay ruling on the $370 million civil fraud case against former President Donald Trump after the judge raised questions about possible perjury during the trial, court records show.

Engoron Monday demanded information about a New York Times report on Allen Weisselberg’s possible perjury plea deal with the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, which the report suggested was linked to testimony the former Trump Organization chief financial officer gave on the stand.

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Ronna McDaniel says she's 'hard at work' as rumors circulate of RNC ouster: report

Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said she's "still hard at work" as rumors of a potential Republican National Committee ouster circulate, according to a new report.

NBC News reported Wednesday that she sent fellow members an email assuring them she would continue in her position for the time being.

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'MAGA out of control': GOP Senator says commentator threatened to destroy him over border

A Republican lawmaker Wednesday accused an unnamed "popular commentator" of threatening to destroy him if he pushed bipartisan border control legislation before the 2024 presidential election.

Sen. James Lankford (R-OK) made this accusation in a Senate session to vote on his bipartisan $118 billion border security-foreign aid to Israel and Ukraine bill that political analysts believe could be dead on arrival.

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Weisselberg may have perjured himself a second time — and Michael Cohen wants answers

It has been over two years since reports dropped that Donald Trump's chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, was suspected of lying to investigators about former Trump attorney Michael Cohen.

Now that the longtime Trump CFO is being investigated for another act of perjury, Cohen wants to know about Weisselberg's previous act of perjury.

CNN reported in August 2021 that four people familiar with prosecutors' thinking told them about Weisselberg, who was given a plea deal with the condition that he testified under oath and told the truth. He would only be sent to prison for five months for his role in a decades-long tax scheme at the Trump Organization.

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The bond Trump owes for the E. Jean Carroll case is being held up by a single filing

Donald Trump has said that he intends to appeal the ruling in the E. Jean Carroll verdict and judgment in the libel and defamation case he lost last year -- but a single court filing seems to be holding everything up.

MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin sorted through the filings online and found that Trump hasn't put up a bond pending his appeal. There's a reason for that: the court judgment hasn't even been filed.

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