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Republicans flop in the first round of debt proposals with unpopular sales tax increase

As Republicans go into talks about whether or not they're willing to raise the debt ceiling, one of their first plans was to dramatically increase sales tax, so those who spend money will be forced to pay more instead of those who make more money. The plan was wildly unpopular and the GOP experienced immediate backlash, even among their own party members. The Democrats saw it as a non-starter.

“I believe it would cause the next Great Depression if we would impose it," Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said.

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DOJ tells Senate that it's working on a briefing over classified documents possession

After former President Donald Trump was found to have classified and top secret documents at his country club in Palm Beach, Florida, the Senate Intelligence Committee asked the Justice Department for a briefing and asked the intelligence community for a damage assessment. The concern is that because security for Mar-a-Lago has been questionable individuals without security clearances could have had access to the information.

When President Joe Biden was found to have a few documents at the Penn Biden Center and in boxes in his garage, the Senate also asked for a damage assessment. Unlike Trump, however, Biden never lived in a location accessible to the public.

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Kevin McCarthy is going to have a hard time having any credibility in House investigations: former Republican

Former Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger (IL) thinks that newly minted House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) is going to have a difficult time trying to hold the kind of hearings that Republicans want.

Speaking to CNN's Jim Acosta on Sunday, Kinzinger asked about McCarthy defying subpoenas from the Jan. 6 committee last year, and how that will work out for him in the GOP Congress.

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The evidence the special prosecutor has against Trump for Jan. 6 explained by former DOJ lawyers

Watergate prosecutor Jill Wine-Banks and Robert Mueller prosecutor Andrew Weissmann joined Jen Taub's podcast "Booked Up" podcast Sunday to discuss possible charges against Donald Trump. The full report, interviews and supplemental materials fully released by the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack and the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election, and it's drawing speculation from the legal community about the case against Trump.

The case made by the Congressional committee was handed over to the Justice Department at the end of last year and Attorney General Merrick Garland tasked a special prosecutor with navigating both the Jan. 6 case against Donald Trump and the stolen White House documents case as well.

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Republican staffer resigns from North Carolina legislature after white supremacist comments surface

The Charlotte Observer is reporting that a policy staffer from the House Speaker's office has resigned after appearing on a "pro-white" radio show called "The Political Cesspool."

An anonymous tip with records was sent to reporters about staffer Carlton Huffman, who was working for North Carolina House Speaker Tim Moore.

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Trump lawyer faces disbarment as California Bar hits him with 11 charges

Two years after penning the infamous "coup memo," the California Bar Association is recommending that former Chapman Law Professor John Eastman be disbarred.

According to a release, there are 11 disciplinary counts (PDF). One count is, "Failure to Support the Constitution and Laws of the United States. There are two counts of "Seeking to Mislead a Court." The Bar Association also cites six counts of "Moral Turpitude - Misrepresentation," and two counts of simply "Moral Turpitude."

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Republican Party chair candidate pledges to hire staffer known for filming office hookup

After California lawyer Harmeet Dhillon announced she was joining the race for the chair of the Republican National Committee, she proclaimed "one of my first job offers" would be Scott Presler.

Politico Playbook explained that for those who spend their time outside of GOP politics and the news that surrounds it, the man likely isn't well-known.

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Judiciary Democrat seeks ways to save the Supreme Court while 'it’s literally destroying its own credibility'

WASHINGTON — Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), who sits on the Judiciary Committee, spoke with reporters on Thursday afternoon about his intentions over the next few weeks in approving judges. But it was his comments about the Supreme Court that the Justices might feel hits too close to home.

President Joe Biden has spent the past few years working to fill vacancies on the federal courts, reaching 97 as of this week. The Senate will cast their approval for the 100th judge in the coming weeks. Former President Donald Trump made 245 appointments in four years.

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Republican Party chair's failures on full display as she runs for reelection: MSNBC panel

Republican Party chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel is running for another term as the head of the party after being effectively installed by Donald Trump in 2017. This time around, however, there are questions about whether her leadership has been that helpful in getting more Republicans elected.

Pillow hawker Mike Lindell is running as well, despite his failure to deliver on conspiracy theories he's promised to reveal for the past two years. He's alleged that the current RNC is corrupt and is guilty of a money laundering scheme, but hasn't provided any evidence of that either.

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How the right-wing is planning to use an old legal trick to block the abortion pill

Legal analyst Elie Mystal noticed that the far-right groups that are trying to ban women's healthcare are shopping for the perfect court where they can get a ban on the pill used to terminate early pregnancies.

Writing for The Nation, the legal analyst explained that the Christian fundamentalists attempted to regulate family planning using their own religious ideology. One group, inaccurately named the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), is suing the FDA, which approved the drug decades ago. They claim that they didn't follow the procedure when approving the drug.

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There is no internal GOP fight — 'Marjorie Taylor Greene is the establishment now’: Ex-GOP operative

WASHINGTON — The political rumor mill has suggested that Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) is dreaming of becoming Donald Trump's vice president as he runs in 2024.

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) didn't seem like he wanted to talk about it.

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Former Sec. Elaine Chao hits back at Trump after multiple racist attacks

Former Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao has issued a rare response to Donald Trump after his repeated attacks against her with racist undertones.

He's mocked her as Sen. Mitch McConnell's (R-KY) “China-loving wife" or intentionally misspelled her name as “Coco Chow." Each time, other Republicans remain silent.

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One of the Dem's debt ceiling plans is to let Republicans self-destruct: columnist

Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin noted that the Democrats have a two-pronged plan to win the debt ceiling battle with Republicans. One is what Democrats have already implemented: show how Republicans are recklessly handling the economic stability of the United States. The other is more unique.

"Part 2: Force House Republicans to put forward a plan on the table and watch as they struggle with the fallout," wrote Rubin.

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