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John Fetterman trashes Oz at rally with women: Abortion advice should come from 'real doctor'

Lt. Gov. John Fetterman was out on the campaign trail over the weekend and he made a pitch to voters to trust women over his Republican opponent.

Speaking to a crowd in suburban Philadelphia on Sunday, Fetterman explained, "women are the reason we can win" but he then corrected himself, saying "women are the reason we win." Pennsylvania has become another state in which the liberty and freedoms of women have been questioned by Republican candidates.

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Mary Trump shoots down fears that an indictment of 'Uncle Donald' is 'too divisive'

Now that more information became available about documents Donald Trump stole from the White House when he left, more questions are surfacing about whether the Justice Department should indict the former president.

On "Meet the Press," for example, Vice President Kamala Harris was awkwardly asked about those who complain that charging Trump with his crimes would be "too divisive." Harris made it clear that Justice has and will be done.

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Senators reveal what would happen to them if they took top secret classified documents from a secure facility

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Senate returned to the Capitol this week from the August Recess, months before the midterm elections but a month after the former president was found to have top secret information he'd taken from the White House at his country club in Florida.

Each party holds its weekly lunches with the caucus just off the floor of the Senate. They voted and then went off in all directions. The Senate Intelligence Committee, however, headed toward the basement where they are able to view top secret information without danger of it being compromised. The sensitive compartmented information facility (SCIF) is to the left of an elevator and next to a police call box. A map to the right shows where to go in the event of an emergency.

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'Steve Bannon is going to jail — the walls are closing in so fast': civil rights attorney

Things aren't working out well for Steve Bannon. Despite being indicted for federal crimes over his "Build the Wall" scam, he was able to score a pardon from former President Donald Trump.

But that doesn't give him a pass for state charges.

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The DOJ can get Trump's hand-picked judge removed from the case — here's how

Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe joined Lawrence O'Donnell onWednesday night and, after hearing him address some of the legal matters facing Donald Trump, yet another law scholar was aghast that anyone would not take this matter seriously. Then former acting solicitor general Neal Katyal came up with a strategy for how the Justice Department can circumvent the actions of the Trump-appointed judge for whom the ex-president had"shopped" to find from the very beginning of his legal woes.

Andrew Weissmann, who served as general counsel for the FBI and a prosecutor on special counsel Robert Mueller's team, began the discussion by saying that the Justice Department could appeal the injunction but not necessarily the special master. The documents that fall under executive privilege are going to be very easy to suss out from those involving personal attorney-client privilege. At the same time, nothing that is in a classified or "top secret" folder is going to fall under privileged information for Donald Trump.

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Law professor sounds the alarm about the new plot to overthrow elections

Donald Trump's legal adviser John Eastman, the author of the so-called "coup memo," which made a legal case for why Vice President Mike Pence can stop the 2020 election certification, also penned a case that state legislatures could overturn the will of voters. This new idea is being funded by conservatives to the tune of over $1.3 billion.

Sounding the alarm on Wednesday was UCLA School of Law professor Rick Hasen, who said that even the so-called "Independence Day Legislature Theory" wouldn't support some of what Eastman is arguing in his new plot.

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Former US attorney believes DOJ is treating Trump unfairly — by using kid gloves

Former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, David Kelley, noted in passing that he thinks the Justice Department is treating the former president unfairly when dealing with the documents he took to Mar-a-Lago.

Speaking on a panel with former FBI counterintelligence expert Frank Figliuzzi on MSNBC, Kelley, suggested that there is a lot more to the case of the stolen document than is being revealed.

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Former Trump lawyer: There will be an indictment 'relatively soon'

Former lawyer to Donald Trump, Michael Cohen, walked through the reasons he thinks that the former president would steal documents from the U.S. government and haul them back to his country club in Palm Beach, Florida.

Speaking to MSNBC on Wednesday, Cohen explained that there are a lot of reasons, but the one he thinks is the most likely is that Trump was using it as leverage in the event that he got indicted.

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Judge refuses to delay the trial for Oath Keeper chief Stewart Rhodes

Oath Keeper leader Stewart Rhodes attempted to delay his trial involving the Jan. 6 attack on Congress, reported ABC News.

Rhodes had asked to pause so he could get a new lawyer because the ones he had were not providing good counsel. The judge didn't buy it, calling it "complete and utter nonsense."

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Former CIA director worries what Trump has already done with the 'Top Secret' documents

Former CIA director John Brennan is worried about particular documents in Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago trove that make him even more nervous about the former president's possession of top secret information.

Trump has a tendency to brag and there is a general fear that he would reveal classified information in trying to impress someone, Brennan explained.

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Reporter recalls Trump's bizarre fascination with nuclear information

One of the more unsettling obsessions the former president had was with his power over nuclear weapons, according to Washington Post reporter Ashly Parker. She spoke with MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace on Wednesday about the long-running history of Donald Trump consuming information about American nuclear capabilities, which continued until the final days of his administration.

Parker recalled that in the very early days of the reports about the search warrant executed at Mar-a-Lago there was a conversation about nuclear information included in the documents that Trump had. Trump immediately called the story "fake news" and said that it was a lie.

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The 2022 midterm elections — and what the data really says

WASHINGTON, D.C. — MSNBC's Steve Kornacki spoke about a shift he was seeing in the electorate heading into November after the Aug. 23 primary and special elections in New York, when passionately pro-choice Democrat Pat Ryan trounced his opponent. Until very recently, the only real data that could illustrate the impact of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision was a Kansas ballot measure that would amend the state’s constitution to make it easy to ban abortion outright in the state. On August 2, 2022, voters resoundingly rejected this amendment.

Weeks later, data is now starting to roll in showing two major trends for 2022 midterm elections that could prevent Republicans from getting the "red wave" they were banking on.

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Former Secretary of Defense walks through what would happen to him if he took the documents Trump did

Former Secretary of Defense William Cohen said that had he taken the documents that Donald Trump did he would have been arrested.

Speaking to MSNBC on Wednesday, Cohen called it "stunning" that the information of such a serious nature would have made it out of the White House, much less Washington, D.C., to the private possession of a former president.

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