Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

U.S. News

Kayleigh McEnany ‘fact-checked by some animated puppies’ after lying about Paw Patrol

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany was fact-checked by an animated children's show on Friday.

Keep reading... Show less

The eviction ban is running out -- and some landlords are gearing up to kick out renters

As tenants across Florida lost their jobs and incomes during the coronavirus pandemic, executives at Axiom Realty Partners LLC, whose portfolio includes at least nine apartment buildings throughout the Southeast, applied pressure on some tenants to either pay rent or move out.

Keep reading... Show less

Twenty-one state attorneys general file suit to stop 'illegal' effort by Trump to skew the census for political gain

The effort by the president to thwart the counting by excluding undocumented immigrants, said New York AG Letitia James, is "another election-year tactic to fire up his base by dehumanizing immigrants and using them as scapegoats for his failures as a leader."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump hates looking like a loser -- right now he looks like one of the biggest losers in U.S. history: op-ed

Writing in the Washington Post this Friday, columnist Henry Olsen says that although President Trump recently canceled his scheduled convention acceptance speech in Jacksonville, Florida, due to the states continued coronavirus spread, the move nevertheless reflects a Trump pattern of "belatedly recognizing that fighting the coronavirus is Americans’ top priority."

Keep reading... Show less

Mary Trump brilliantly shuts down Meghan McCain’s accusation that she’s attacking the president to get rich

Conservative Republican activist Meghan McCain, co-host of ABC’s “The View,” is no fan of President Donald Trump, who she continues to hold in very low regard because of all the derogatory things he said about her late father, Sen. John McCain of Arizona. But when the president’s niece, Mary Trump, appeared on “The View” this week, McCain was critical of her new tell-all book, “Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man” — which is the top-selling book on Amazon and sold 1.35 million copies during its first week, according to publisher Simon & Schuster.

Keep reading... Show less

Feds charge 18 people in Portland after protests against Trump's DHS at the federal courthouse

U.S. Attorney Billy J. Williams announced on Friday that 18 people have been arrested after protests at the Mark O. Hatfield U.S. Courthouse in Portland.

Keep reading... Show less

Senate Republicans slammed for leaving town as unemployment benefits are set to expire: 'It's going to lead to desperation'

Sen. Ron Wyden excoriated his Republican colleagues in a floor speech Thursday as they prepared to skip town for the weekend without finalizing a plan to extend the $600-per-week boost in unemployment benefits set to expire in just two days, leaving 30 million Americans without a key financial lifeline.

Keep reading... Show less

New polling reveals GOP governors’ disastrous handling of COVID-19 is coming back to bite them

This summer’s surge in coronavirus infections has been felt all over the Sun Belt, from Florida to Texas to Arizona. David Nather, in Axios, reports that Republican governors in four Sun Belt states are now suffering from low approval of their handling of the crisis — whereas in California, another state that is being hit hard by the surge, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom is still popular.

Keep reading... Show less

WATCH: White woman calls cops on Latino man when he asks for her insurance after fender-bender

Yet another 'Karen' video is making the rounds, this time showing a woman in a supermarket parking lot calling the police saying she's fearful of a man who asked for her insurance after a minor fender bender.

Keep reading... Show less

Unimaginative Trump returns to spewing racist paranoia as his reelection hopes appear to crumble before him

In 2018, Donald Trump's very-stable-genius plan to win the midterm elections for Republicans was to hype the hell out of a so-called caravan of Central American refugees who were crossing Mexico in hopes of seeking asylum in the United States. About 7,000 people, mostly consisting of families with children, were indeed making the 2,500-mile trek to escape poverty and gang violence, but Trump and his Republican sycophants tried to convince American voters that they were coming to the U.S. to kill white people and burn down the suburbs. Through his preferred media of Twitter and Fox News, Trump endlessly hyped the "invasion" of these migrants, and suggesting they might be terrorists, and were coming to create gang warfare, not escape it.This article was originally published at SalonThe nonstop fear-mongering about the caravan did work its magic on the ever-gullible mainstream news media. A Media Matters study published two weeks before the election showed a precipitous rise in cable news coverage of what would have otherwise been a minor story, as similar caravans had been in previous years.

Keep reading... Show less

White House ‘won’t get into’ whether or not Trump talked with Putin about Russian bounties to kill US soldiers

It's been exactly four weeks since The New York Times revealed a Russian bounty program to pay the Taliban to kill U.S. soldiers. President Donald Trump has never talked to Russian President Vladimir Putin about the program, as far as Americans know, but now he has missed an opportunity to register a warning with Putin.

Keep reading... Show less

McDonald's latest to require face masks in US as COVID-19 continues to surge

McDonald's on Friday became the latest US corporate giant to require customers to wear face masks as it paused additional dining room reopenings in response to the US coronavirus outbreak.

Keep reading... Show less

A conservative explains why Trump's attempt to win suburban women will backfire

President Donald Trump is very fond of 1950s-like images. In May, he criticized CBS News reporters Paula Reid and Weijia Jiang for not being more like the stay-at-home mom Donna Reed portrayed on her sitcom, “The Donna Reed Show,” from 1958-1966 — and in a tweet posted on Thursday, Trump warned the “suburban housewives of America” that former Vice President Joe Biden, if elected, will destroy their way of life. Conservative opinion writer Jennifer Rubin slams Trump’s tweet in her new Washington Post column, arguing that it was “condescending” and underscores his problems with female voters.

Keep reading... Show less