Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

U.S. News

Trump will use national emergencies to punish his foes if he wins in 2024: former staffer

Former chief of staff to the Department of Homeland Security, Miles Taylor, released his latest book "Blowback: A warning to save democracy from the next Trump" Wednesday – and in it he describes how former boss Donald Trump used national emergencies to hurt his enemies.

Taylor who, under the name Anonymous penned an op-ed entitled, "I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration" in the New York Times in September 2018, described how Trump doctored a hurricane forecast to punish those who'd upset him.

Keep reading... Show less

Historian warns Trump can scare jurors by hinting if they convict he'll put them on his 'list'

Historian Michael Beschloss sounded the alarm on MSNBC Monday about Donald Trump's new 2024 presidential campaign that appears to be running on dictatorship.

He's "the only person in all of American history who has said if you elect me, my intention is to establish a presidential dictatorship," he told host Joy Ann Reid. "Telling you the American people, your families, everyone you know, your friends, others, [that] every private aspect of your life — if you're running a business, there's not going to be an independent Federal Trade Commission. Donald Trump will tell your business what to do. If you're part of a media organization as we are, there will not be, for instance, an independent Federal Communications Commission. Donald Trump, if he hears something on MSNBC or another network that he doesn't like, something he reads in The New York Times, which is probably pretty likely, he can do a lot to have what we do, what all of us do, stilled and perhaps even those organizations abolished."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump teasing authoritarianism admits his own defeat: MSNBC host

The recent New York Times report details Donald Trump is promoting authoritarianism and anticipating throwing out career staff in the government to replace them with his own ideologues. It was a plot he attempted to deploy in Oct. 2020 with a personnel chief that began sorting through the government employees for just such a purge of "disloyal" staff.

Speaking about it on Monday, MSNBC host Joy Ann Reid and historian Michael Beschloss compared the ideology to Hungary's Viktor Orban, which the far-right has promoted over the years.

Keep reading... Show less

Former DOJ espionage lawyer explains what Trump’s lawyers will exploit to try and stop or delay his trial

Speaking to MSNBC on Monday, the former Robert Mueller assistant and former national security official at the Department of Justice predicted that Donald Trump and his lawyers would do whatever they can to exploit every possible window of attack against special counsel Jack Smith and his case.

The conversation with Brandon Van Grack began by discussing part of the predictions for how Trump's first hearing will go. A protective order is being sought to help ensure the classified documents don't end up plastered on the front pages of tabloids. It means that Trump's lawyers must sign off on the protective order for the documents.

Keep reading... Show less

Jen Psaki wants to see Biden stop being Mr. Nice Guy

Speaking to Tim Miller and Sarah Longwell with the Bulwark, new MSNBC host Jen Psaki explained why she'd like to see President Joe Biden stop playing nice.

In a conversation about how to beat Donald Trump, Psaki explained that there is a question of talking about accomplishments to rally support for what has been done or if it's about running against Trump directly, and how to balance the two.

Keep reading... Show less

Nicolle Wallace fumes that her ex-GOP colleagues failed to rebuke Trump's autocratic rant

The New York Times wrote Monday about Donald Trump's weekend speech at a far-right conference that outlined some of his authoritarian visions for his next presidency. Going deeper, the Times explained that Trump aims to recreate the U.S. government so that it would be an extension of the president's whims rather than independently operating to carry out the laws and the regulations of the nation.

It isn't the first time Trump has made such a proclamation, nor is it an ambition that he's hidden from the public. Toward the end of 2020, Trump began to enact such a plan, moving to craft a "personal goon squad" of loyal career staffers that goes against measures enacted centuries ago to ensure friends, family and donors weren't handed jobs.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's judge wants to nail down trial schedule at Tuesday hearing: legal expert

A court hearing Tuesday in Miami for Donald Trump and his valet Walt Nauta is set to nail down the trial schedule, a legal analyst revealed Monday.

Judge Aileen Cannon is expected to address the Classified Information Procedures Act (CIPA), specifically how the court will handle certain classified information.

Keep reading... Show less

'Trump is going to eat them all alive': Ex-Republican explains why no one will survive a debate with Trump

Former Republican Rick Wilson explained that former President Donald Trump will likely bring down the Republican Party in the Iowa Caucuses with one debate. That is, if he's willing to do one.

Former Republican chair Michael Steele substituted for the MSNBC Sunday night crew and asked Wilson what the other Republican candidates have to do to have any hope in the early primary and caucus states.

Keep reading... Show less

Impeachment lawyer details the list of people who will be indicted along with Trump for 2020 election fraud

Former Donald Trump impeachment lawyer and ethics czar Norm Eisen gave a list of the top co-defendants that he thinks will also be indicted along with the former president when it comes to Jan. 6 and the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election.

Speaking to former FBI deputy director Andy McCabe and legal analyst Allison Gill, Eisen brought up his model prosecution memo posted to Just Security last week.

Keep reading... Show less

State attorney explains how Judge Cannon could risk being taken off Trump case in upcoming hearing

Dave Aronberg, Florida state attorney for Palm Beach County, explained to CNN's Jim Acosta that Donald Trump is taking a considerable risk with his latest move to try and delay his trial until after the 2024 election. Special counsel Jack Smith hasn't been amenable to the request thus far.

Trump is set to appear in court this week with his co-defendant, valet Walt Nauta. Aronberg explained that it should be nothing more than a normal hearing, but the former president isn't known for doing things the normal way.

Keep reading... Show less

Saudi farming company can't use their country's water for crops — so they're taking it from Arizona

A Washington Post exposé revealed that Saudi Arabia is aware that their options for growing crops in the desert are limited. It takes a hefty amount of water to grow alfalfa and it appears the country doesn't want to waste their water doing it. So, they're using water from Arizona.

Arizona is among the states currently suffering from an extended heat disaster. During the so-called "monsoon season," Arizona is able to collect water that can help for times like these. Unfortunately, this heat front has lasted longer than normal, resulting in what the Post called a "megadrought."

Keep reading... Show less

Marjorie Taylor Greene ridiculed after her attacks on Biden seem more like compliments

The speech by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) at the Turning Point Action conference left some progressives scratching their heads after her attacks on President Joe Biden appeared to be more like compliments.

Ranting at the far-right crowd, Greene attacked programs like Social Security, Medicare and other programs started by the late Democratic presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson.

Keep reading... Show less

Ron DeSantis burns through campaign cash — and suffers problems with his high-dollar donors

NBC News reported this weekend that Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) had to fire some staff after realizing he hired too many people before securing the fundraising. The report detailed some critical missteps in the DeSantis money machine that predicts a difficult path forward.

Candidates have donors that give them the maximum amount per election, meaning both the primary and general elections. They can't spend the money in the general election. So, of DeSantis' $12 million cash on hand, he can only spend $9 million of it.

Keep reading... Show less