Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

U.S. News

'Devastating to Republicans across the map': GOP operatives are worried about November -- and not just about Trump

If November brings as much of a blue wave as Democratic strategists are hoping for, Democrats will not only recapture the White House and the U.S. Senate, but will also increase their majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. Reporter Ally Mutnick discusses that possibility in a July 29 article for Politico, addressing GOP fears that even more Democrats might be in the House in 2021.

Keep reading... Show less

Viewers call Meghan McCain a 'coward' for skipping Susan Rice episode a day after bashing her

Meghan McCain was absent from Susan Rice's appearance on "The View," a day after blasting her tenure as President Barack Obama's national security adviser.

Keep reading... Show less

WATCH: Portland gas station threatens to call police on Black man for trying to buy gas

An attendant at a gas station which was said to be in Portland, Oregon threatened to call the police on a Black man who was trying to buy gas.

Keep reading... Show less

Bill Barr will be tested after COVID-19 positive Louie Gohmert was 'within arms length'

U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX), who just tested positive for the coronavirus, was very near Bill Barr on Tuesday before the Attorney General gave testimony to the House Judiciary Committee. Politico reports the Attorney General will now be tested for the virus.

Keep reading... Show less

Yale study on $600 unemployment lifeline destroys favorite GOP talking point

The analysis comes as Senate Republicans are trying to cut the expanded benefits for workers who have lost jobs during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Keep reading... Show less

Secret memos reveal Kavanaugh tried to ‘sidestep’ Supreme Court cases on Trump’s financial records: report

When Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed by the GOP-controlled U.S. Senate in 2018 and sworn in as a U.S. Supreme Court justice, Democrats feared that he would be very sympathetic to President Donald Trump’s agenda — more so than former Justice Anthony Kennedy, the right-wing libertarian he replaced. But Joan Biskupic, a CNN legal analyst, is reporting that according to “multiple sources,” Kavanaugh “urged his colleagues in a series of private memos this spring to consider avoiding decisions in major disputes over abortion and Democratic subpoenas for President Donald Trump’s financial records.”

Keep reading... Show less

Reagan right-winger: Trump's 'silent enablers' must ‘lose in a landslide’ in November for the good of Republican Party

One need only look at the titles of Mona Charen’s books to see how right-wing her views are — titles like “Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got it Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First” and “Do-Gooders: How Liberals Hurt Those They Claim to Help (and the Rest of Us)” as well as “Sex Matters: How Modern Feminism Lost Touch with Science, Love and Common Sense.” But Charen is no fan of President Donald Trump, who she believes has been terrible for the Republican Party and the conservative movement. And in a biting July 29 article for The Bulwark, the 63-year-old opinion columnist/author and former Nancy Reagan speechwriter argues that the more victories Democrats enjoy in November, the better off conservatism will be in the long run.

Keep reading... Show less

Even if Trump loses by a landslide, the 'global economy' is not coming back

COVID-19 has not only presented the global economy with its greatest public health challenge in over a century, but also likely killed off the notion of America's "unipolar moment" for good. That doesn't mean full-on autarky or isolationism but, rather, enlightened selfishness, which allows for some limited cooperation. Donald Trump's ongoing threats to impose additional tariffs on a range of EU exports are exacerbating this trend as the old post-World War II ties between the two regions continue to fray. Even the possibility of a Biden administration is unlikely to presage a reversion to the status quo ante. Regionalization and multipolarity will be the order of the day going forward.

Many will regard these developments as chiefly driven by geopolitical prerogatives. But over time, the driving engine of the process will be a combination of maturing technologies that are rewriting the laws of profitability in manufacturing and production for advanced economies. The various capacities that enabled a far-flung global supply chain and sent the economies of Asia into hyperdrive over the past 40 years have continued to mature. The rise of China, South Korea and Japan in this period is just a phase of a larger series of advances that are now likely to become more distributed and at the same time reshuffle the geopolitical trend lines we currently experience.

Keep reading... Show less

'Great ad for Sara Gideon': Susan Collins's new attack on Dem opponent massively backfires

Sen. Susan Collins's (R-ME) re-election campaign has put out a new attack ad against Democratic opponent Sara Gideon -- but it appears to have massively backfired, as many observers say it makes Gideon look good.

Keep reading... Show less

Art of the deal: Team Trump is paying double for a coronavirus vaccine

Moderna, a relatively new biotech company, has generally been seen as the leading U.S. contender to develop a coronavirus vaccine, although it trails several Chinese companies. Whether or not its vaccine pans out, it should certainly get an award for milking the government.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's federal agents to withdraw from Portland: Dem Oregon governor

Federal troops that were deployed weeks ago by the Trump administration have agreed to withdraw from the city of Portland, Democratic Oregon Gov. Kate Brown said on Wednesday.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump at Joint Base Andrews 'did not appear to acknowledge' plane carrying John Lewis' body

President Donald Trump came within yards of Rep. John Lewis' body on Wednesday but "did not appear to acknowledge" the civil rights icon.

Keep reading... Show less

US to move 11,900 troops out from Germany: Pentagon

The United States will slash its military presence in Germany by 11,900 troops, relocating some to Italy and Belgium in a major shift of Washington's NATO assets, Defense Secretary Mark Esper announced Wednesday.

Keep reading... Show less