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George Santos sent personal 'thank you' notes to Republicans who helped bury expulsion resolution: report

Rep. George Santos (R-NY) sent off "thank you notes" to Republican lawmakers who helped defeat a Democratic-led measure to vote on his expulsion from the House, reported The Daily Beast on Monday.

"Several House Republicans familiar with the matter told the outlet that Santos’ staff hand-delivered the letters to their offices," reported A.J. McDougall. "'I want to personally thank you for your support in referring the vote for my expulsion to the Ethics Committee,' the letter reads. 'This has been an especially difficult time in my life, and I want to serve my constituents the best I can. Now more than ever, the Republican majority needs to stick together, and you demonstrated great dedication and courage by putting differences aside to allow the proper process to play out.'"

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Trump has a sort of gag order against him — but Michael Cohen has no hope he'll observe it

Former President Donald Trump was told earlier this month that he must follow a protective order from a judge demanding that he not attack any prosecution witness by revealing their personal information to the public. It's part of the criminal case involving Stormy Daniels hush money payments.

At issue is that Trump tends to attack anyone he dislikes or who speaks out against him. In the case of The People of the State of New York vs. Donald J. Trump, the defendant has been told he can't do that and, if he does, there will be consequences.

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Former White House lawyer predicts Donald Trump is going to jail

Former Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal thinks that Donald Trump is going to jail – and his thoughts are backed up by two of Trump's former lawyers.

Speaking to MSNBC's Katie Phang on Monday, Katyal addressed the recent revelations that Trump's lawyer Evan Corcoran kept about 50 pages of notes from the early days of the document scandal. Those notes are now exposing possible obstructions of justice when a subpoena for them was issued to the DOJ and FBI.

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Jack Smith might suspect Trump was trying to make money from classified documents: former White House lawyer

Former Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal worries former Donald Trump was trying to make money from classified documents found in his Mar-a-Lago home.

Speaking on MSNBC Monday – just after news broke that special counsel Jack Smith had subpoenaed financial records from the Trump Organization's business deals with seven countries since 2017. According to Katyal, it could mean Smith is following the money from the government documents Trump took.

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Special counsel subpoenas Trump Organization for foreign records in documents case

The special counsel's investigation into former President Donald Trump's handling of classified documents has subpoenaed records from the Trump Organization, including foreign financial records from seven countries, The New York Times reported Monday.

"It remains unclear precisely what the prosecutors were hoping to find by sending the subpoena to Mr. Trump’s company, the Trump Organization, or when it was issued," the Times reported. "But the subpoena suggests that investigators have cast a wider net than previously understood as they scrutinize whether he broke the law in taking sensitive government materials with him upon leaving the White House and then not fully complying with demands for their return."

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E. Jean Carroll adds Trump's CNN comments to defamation case

E. Jean Carroll asked a civil court to consider comments former President Donald Trump made on CNN's town hall in an ongoing defamation lawsuit that is separate from the one settled on May 9.

In a filing Monday, she asked the court to consider the comments he made the day after she was awarded $5 million in damages.

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The most shocking things producers discovered for new Duggar documentary

The latest installment of the Duggar family's life story is about to be screened in an Amazon documentary, coming two years after family member Josh Duggar was found guilty of possession of child pornography.

As he serves more than 12 years in prison, "Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets" walks through the issues that stemmed from Josh and the links the family – made famous in the TLC reality series“19 Kids and Counting" – has to a radical religious sect that People Magazine characterized as "concerning."

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'They were willing to take the government down': Democrat doubts GOP cares about the debt ceiling

Republicans in the House are still threatening not to pay America's bills if President Joe Biden doesn't agree to their demands. It prompted CNN's Jim Acosta to wonder if it was too naive to hope that Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) would bring moderate Republicans together with Democrats to agree to pay the bills. A Democratic member explained that there really is no hope.

"That is not realistic with this speaker or with this House of Representatives," explained Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN). "If that would happen, they would certainly recall him and they'd elect a new speaker, and McCarthy does not want to be the shortest-serving speaker in history."

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Former GOP governor explains why Ron DeSantis' bad polls are bringing more candidates into the 2024 race

For a brief moment in March 2023, the U.S. appeared to have two major Republican presidential candidates. However, after Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) finished his book tour, the poll numbers looked terrible. In fact, CNN.com pointed out that DeSantis was polling at the same level as conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who's running as a Democratic presidential candidate.

"A new survey of 500 very likely voters in Kentucky’s Primary from Emerson College holds that 'former President Donald Trump holds the majority of support with 70 percent, an 8-point increase since April, from 62 percent,'" reported Florida Politics this week. "Ron DeSantis follows with 14 percent, a 9-point decrease since last month, from 23 percent to 14 percent.'"

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Trump's ex-lawyer struggles to explain why Trump can magically declassify something he doesn't know exists

Donald Trump's former lawyer Tim Parlatore appeared on CNN on Sunday to explain how the former president could declassify things with his mind.

Speaking to Parlatore, CNN's Paula Reid asked how someone could claim that they didn't know the documents were at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's residence in Florida, and then turn around and say that he could declassify them with the power of his mind.

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'The Black people are running rampant': Republican uses Dan Abrams show to justify racism in C-SPAN call

Bobby from Grayson, Kentucky, called into the Republican line to tell Democrats they are stupid.

He attacked a previous caller who he said "white people [are] bad" and said that the Dan Abrams show "On Patrol: Live" is the best justification for his beliefs about the different races in America.

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30 tons of explosives company's ammonium nitrate lost while on rail transit

Ammonium nitrate itself isn't explosive, but it's the base component in explosives. It's heavily regulated due to the dangers it presents to the public.

So, when the company Dyno Nobel sealed up the rail car for it to be transported from Wyoming to California, it followed all of the rules. When it arrived in California, however, it was gone, with the doors still sealed.

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Former Republican congressman explains why he no longer wants to raise his family in Florida

Former Rep. David Jolly (R-FL) was born and raised in Florida, and he represented his state in Congress, but after the actions of the fringe-GOP legislature and Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL), he's thinking about moving. DeSantis reportedly intends to officially launch his 2024 campaign in the coming week.

TIME Magazine quoted Jolly in a piece on DeSantis, saying that his hostility has permeated"through the air to make the state no longer desirable to vacationers and retirees.

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