Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

U.S. News

Lincoln Project brutally mocks Ron DeSantis for wimping out of fighting Trump at CPAC

The ex-Republican group Lincoln Project is up with a new video ridiculing Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) for pulling out of CPAC. The organization is facing a lot of backlash from Republicans after the chair of the group was accused of groping a male staffer on Herschel Walker's Senate campaign.

During the 2022 campaign, the Lincoln Project said that DeSantis ran an "SNL-worthy" commercial promoting his military service, saying he would never "back down from a fight." But that's exactly what's happening at CPAC this week.

Keep reading... Show less

When asked about work on the economy, Republican touts 1-minute floor speech and Chamber gala

WASHINGTON — House Republicans have focused their attention on a number of hearings attacking Democrats, President Joe Biden and his government.

The House crafted a committee that they are calling the "weaponization of government," claiming that the government is singling out Republicans unfairly. At the same time, polls show that Americans view the GOP's committees as purely political, and they're not doing enough to investigate actual problems.

Keep reading... Show less

Former FBI official blames Trump 'bashing institutions' for why agents were scared to 'do the right thing' at Mar-a-Lago

The Washington Post reported Wednesday morning that there was a fight at the FBI among agents about whether they should enforce the search warrant issued for Mar-a-Lago for the stolen documents from the White House. There were FBI agents that felt they should do more to try and get the documents, which was a negotiation that had been underway for a year at that point.

Speaking to MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace about the reporting was former FBI official Frank Figliuzzi, who was previously the deputy director of the FBI for counterintelligence, explained that there are debates between agents and prosecutors all the time.

Keep reading... Show less

Republicans are 'emboldened' because there has been no accountability for J6: ex-White House lawyer

Lawmakers who participated in the Jan. 6 attacks and the planning of the attack on the Capitol have never been held accountable for their involvement. It's something that former acting solicitor general Neal Katyal says has "emboldened" them.

MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace played a clip of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) ranting to Gabriel Sterling, the COO of the Georgia Secretary of State, that the 2020 election was fake, Donald Trump won and that thousands of dead people voted. The facts have been proven over and over again. The special grand jury in Georgia went so far as to say that the fraud Greene claimed wasn't true. The new grand jury that will begin this month will have an opportunity to confirm the findings.

Keep reading... Show less

Matt Schlapp complains he's a 'victim' of a left-wing conspiracy after GOP operatives accuse him of groping

CPAC chair Matt Schlapp has been accused by at least one male Republican operative of sexual assault after he allegedly groped the campaign worker in Georgia. Since then, Schlapp has faced a number of accusations about a hostile work environment. Now that Schlapp is about to start the latest CPAC meeting in Maryland on Wednesday evening, he's speaking out about being a "victim."

The Daily Beast reported that Schlapp is claiming he's under attack by "fake journalists pushing this leftist agenda and lying." In actual fact, Schlapp is being accused of misconduct by a former staffer of Herschel Walker's 2022 Senate campaign. The staff on the Walker campaign not only corroborated the staffer's complaints at the time but also supported him in his complaints.

Keep reading... Show less

GOP senator's personal Twitter abruptly suspended after he giddily endorsed Elon Musk takeover

Sen. Mike Lee's (R-UT) sock-puppet Twitter account, "BasedMikeLee," was suspended on Wednesday by Twitter after he used the account to lash out against Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida for not releasing U.S. Navy Lt. Ridge Alkonis from prison.

Lee immediately took to Twitter to complain about it:

Keep reading... Show less

There is another chemical disaster that is just 20 miles southeast of Ohio train’s derailment

Republican lawmakers have recently decided that environmental disasters are a severe problem in the Rust Belt and that the Environmental Protection Agency should act to protect East Palestine, Ohio, residents after a train derailment sent chemicals into the Ohio River and groundwater.

Some of the top Republican senators that have complained the most have also been caught taking money from the top four big rail companies, including Norfolk Southern, which owned the train that crashed in February.

Keep reading... Show less

National security expert mocks Blackburn for accidentally making the case all Jan. 6 participants should be arrested

Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) attacked Attorney General Merrick Garland on Wednesday during the Senate Oversight Committee hearing regarding attacks on so-called "crisis pregnancy centers," which use false information to talk women out of having abortions.

Blackburn brought up a Nashville anti-abortion group that she said was "firebombed" and that the attackers' group name was spray painted on the wall. She asked why people hadn't been arrested. Local law enforcement must have evidence before they can make arrests and conduct prosecutions.

Keep reading... Show less

Watch: Cory Booker goes line by line to dispel Republican conspiracies in Garland hearing

Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) spoke out in the Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday about some of the questions that Republicans have posed throughout the hearing that parrot false conspiracy theories.

It began with Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) addressing Attorney General Merrick Garland by falsely saying that the White House helped teachers' unions write a letter complaining about parents calling teachers Nazis or pedophiles. Insulting teachers was never an issue in the Justice Department, Garland explained. He issued a directive encouraging FBI field offices to track threats against schools and administrations.

Keep reading... Show less

Furious Ted Cruz shouts at Merrick Garland as he erupts over Kavanaugh protests

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) began shouting at Attorney General Merrick Garland on Wednesday during a Senate Oversight hearing. Among the things Cruz was angry about was that the Department of Justice was not in the process of prosecuting protesters who went to Brett Kavanaugh's home and posted information about the Supreme Court justice's location.

"As you know, those threats finally materialized with Nicholas Russki, a 26-year-old man from California who traveled across the country, was arrested outside the home of Justice [Brett] Kavanaugh, armed with a handgun, a knife, and burglary tools," said Cruz. "He said that he came there to kill Justice Kavanaugh because he was enraged by the leaked opinion. Now of course you are prosecuting that individual for attempted murder. But did you bring even a single case to enforce this law, or did the Department of Justice decided this law doesn't apply it if it is harassing justices' opinions that we don't like?"

Keep reading... Show less

'Really unacceptable': FBI blasted after new watchdog report

A report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) revealed that neither FBI Director Christopher Wray nor Attorney General Merrick Garland has conducted an internal investigation into the FBI's processing of information known ahead of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

A key piece of the House Select Committee investigating the attack focused on the failures of law enforcement, finding multiple examples of agencies that were warned ahead of time that an attack was coming and did nothing to ensure added protection on Jan. 6.

Keep reading... Show less

Ron DeSantis’ rage against Disney is worse than Trump trying to get Jimmy Kimmel fired: columnist

Ron DeSantis and the Republican-led Florida legislature officially ushered in laws that remove any power or control that Disney has over the area of their park south of Orlando. Up until recently, Disney has been operating its own utilities, fire department and emergency services. Now, taxpayers will be forced to spend money to fund that.

It could end up costing taxpayers as much as $1 billion, because it passes the infrastructure debt onto the taxpayers instead of the corporation. The Florida bill (HB 9) tried to fix the problem by handing power to DeSantis to appoint a board of the taxing district. They would have the authority to levy property taxes and fees, issue bonds and provide services, the Orlando Sentinel reported this month.

Keep reading... Show less

Former FBI general counsel says more lawsuits are probably coming for Fox News over election lies

In a conversation with Stephanie Ruhle on Monday, former FBI general counsel, Andrew Weissmann, suggested that "more" charges might be coming "on the criminal side" for Fox News.

Speaking to Nicolle Wallace on Tuesday, he focused more on the idea of legal consequences that Fox News could face as a company.

Keep reading... Show less