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Politics

BUSTED: Melania Trump lifted portions of her Capitol riot statement from her own RNC speech

First Lady Melania Trump was caught lifting at least one portion of her Republican National Convention speech and using it for a statement about the Capitol Hill riots that were inspired by President Donald Trump.

The first lady made the statement in a release on the White House website. In the statement, she complained that she had faced criticism in the aftermath of the failed insurrection.

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Jeanine Pirro: Shutting down Parler is 'akin to Kristallnacht' when Nazis murdered Jews

Fox News host Jeanine Pirro on Monday compared a social media company's outage to the Kristallnacht incident, when Nazis murdered close to 100 Jews in 1938.

Pirro expressed her outrage during an appearance on Fox & Friends after tech companies Apple, Google and Amazon prevented the social media company Parler from using their platforms. The tech companies alleged that Parler had violated terms of service by spreading hate speech that was linked to violence at the U.S. Capitol last week.

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'I have to wear a scarlet T now': Trump staffers whine that his riot has destroyed their reputations

Trump White House staffers are upset at President Donald Trump because the riot at the United States Capitol building he incited last week is harming their future employment prospects.

According to Bloomberg News senior White House reporter Jennifer Jacobs, many Trump staffers are "incensed" at the president for sparking an insurrection against Congress because it's made them toxic among employers who would otherwise be eager to hire people with experience working at the executive branch of the United States government.

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Ted Cruz should 'shut up' and 'stop embarrassing himself': GOP Texas state lawmaker

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) is now getting called out by one of his fellow Texas Republicans.

Republican Texas State Rep. Lyle Larson this week said it was time for Cruz to be quiet for his role in leading a failed attempt to block President-elect Joe Biden's victory from being certified in Congress last week.

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Melania Trump whines about ‘salacious gossip’ about her in new official statement on Capitol rampage

Melania Trump issued a statement deploring the violence committed by her husband's supporters at the U.S. Capitol -- and somehow managed to make herself a victim.

The first lady made the public statement five days after President Donald Trump's supporters stormed the Capitol as Congress certified Joe Biden's election win, and she condemned the violence that left six dead and complained that she'd been personally attacked over the event.

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'Trump passes the test' for being prosecuted for inciting the Capitol riot: ex-Justice Department officials

According to a commentary written for Politico by two former senior Justice Department officials, Donald Trump likely would not be able to seek refuge by asserting his 1st Amendment right to free speech should he be indicted for inciting the mob to storm the U.S. Capitol last week that led to five deaths.

With the FBI and Justice Department officials scouring the country and arresting participants in the assault that shocked the world, former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and David Williams, a former inspector general for multiple agencies, write that the Supreme Court has already set the legal threshold for prosecution when it comes to inciting a riot -- and that the president went well beyond it.

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AOC slams Sarah Sanders for whining about losing 50,000 followers from Twitter's pro-Trump 'neo-Nazi' purge

U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) has some "free advice" for Sarah Huckabee Sanders: "if you are losing tens of thousands of followers the moment Twitter starts taking down Neo-Nazis and violent insurrectionists, maybe don't advertise that!"

Huckabee Sanders, the former Trump White House press secretary who is planning a run to become Arkansas's next governor, took to the social media platform that just banned President Donald Trump to lament not Wednesday's domestic terrorist attack and attempted coup incited by her former boss and not the death of a Capitol police officer, but her loss of Twitter followers.

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Trump ghostwriter rips ex-Trump adviser for not admitting he made a mistake helping president win in 2016

A genial conversation on MSNBC about Donald Trump losing his Twitter privileges turned into a shouting match by the end as Trump ghostwriter Tony Schwartz and former Trump adviser Sam Nunberg got into it over who was more culpable for building the president up.

Towards the end of the segment with host Alex Witt, Schwartz challenged Nunberg for still being proud of the work he did getting the president elected -- only to have Nunberg slam him for profiting off ghostwriting Trump's "Art of the Deal."

"I'm going to ask this of Tony, last question," Witt stated. "A friend in Palm Beach told me that the general sentiment there is that Donald Trump will be a nobody in five minutes and that he's embarrassed himself beyond repair, do you agree?"

"I can't help but answer on Sam," Schwartz exclaimed after trying to cut in on Nuberg moments before. "It is incredibly sad to me that a guy could have done what Trump's done, he has been a sociopath since the first day that Sam Nunberg met him and it's really sad to hear somebody say, 'I don't take any responsibility.'"

"I spent four years taking responsibility for the mistake I made 35 years ago," he continued as his voice began to rise. "Come on, Sam, you step up and get others like you to step up. It's time to say the truth about this man he is one of the worst human beings alive -- maybe the worst."

"The question was, do I regret helping him get elected president?" Nunberg snapped back as the two loudly talked over each other. "I don't regret the Supreme Court, I don't regret where Jerusalem stands today, and that's my position, Tony. If you don't like it, that's fine, Tony, give back all the money you made during the years when you needed it with 'Art of the Deal.'"

"I've given a quarter of million dollars of royalties from 'The Art of the Deal' back,'" the author shot back as Nunberg continued on.

"I find you interesting with what you said," Nunberg interjected. "My position is the following once again: he did a service to the forgotten men and women, the people that had no voice under a two-party system, and in the end, I am happy that he beat Hillary Clinton who is the most --."

"We so don't have time to get into Hillary Clinton. I'm sorry, " host Witt interceded after letting the two battle it out.

Watch below:


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PGA to strip Trump golf club of 2022 PGA Championship: report

The PGA of America has hinted at plans to prevent President Donald Trump's National Bedminster golf club from holding the 2022 PGA Championship, NJ.com reported.

The organization made the move after the president incited a deadly riot on Capitol Hill.

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'Trump voters are ready to declare war with each other' after Capitol riot debacle: GOP pollster

According to a report in the Washington Post, both Republican members of Congress and voters who backed Donald Trump are starting to see the outgoing president as damaged goods after he incited a riot at the U.S. Capitol that led to five deaths and send lawmakers fleeing for their lives.

Under a headline reading, "As Trump leaves office weakened, Republicans wonder if his wounds are fatal," the Post reports that the Wednesday attack that appalled the country likely damaged any chance the president has of any future in politics with some two-time Trump voters wanting nothing to do with him now.

According to the Post's Phillip Rucker, "In the wake of the mob attack on the Capitol that Trump incited, some allies have abandoned him, many in the business community have shunned him and Twitter took away his social media megaphone. Many Republicans also hold him responsible for losing their Senate majority with last week's twin defeats in Georgia, not to mention their House majority two years ago."

In an interview, Republican strategist Scott Reed admitted that last 60 days of Trump's presidency have been nothing short of a disaster.

"The way he handled himself in the last 60 days has tarnished his reputation and his ability to be a future leader — and by botching the Georgia Senate races, his entire economic agenda is about to get overturned by the Senate," Reed explained. "He's really gone backwards like no one ever would have imagined."

While senior Trump advisor Jason Miller claimed, "President Trump is still the biggest name in American politics and the president is still the leader of the Republican Party. He'll be the most sought-after political endorsement heading into the 2022 midterms," longtime conservative pollster Frank Luntz vehemently disagreed.

Citing a focus group with Trump supporters he conducted the night after the attack that claimed five lives, Luntz stated that Trump voters fall into three categories described as: "those who believe the fact that President-elect Joe Biden won the election and think it's time Trump move on; those who think it was stolen from Trump but he still should move on; and those who think it was stolen and Trump should continue to fight."

Luntz said the fracturing of Trump's base "flabbergasted" him.

"They were very emotional with each other, very harsh with each other," Luntz reported. "This has never happened in a Trump focus group I've done. . . . Trump voters are like single moms with kids. They back each other, they empathize with each other, because they know the stresses and strains they each have. Not anymore. These Trump voters are ready to declare war with each other."

According to Luntz, this is very bad news for Trump if he plans to make another run for the presidency in 2024.

"When you've got a unified force, you can speak to them as their general and motivate them to change their behavior," he elaborated. "But when they have broken down into tribes, it's impossible to deliver a message that reaches everybody. Trump is much less powerful today than he was 72 hours ago."

You can read more here.

Lawmakers warned to get tested for COVID-19 due to possible exposure during Capitol riot

According to a report from Politico's Sarah Ferris, the Capitol attending physician has warned lawmakers on both sides of the aisle that they need to be tested for COVID-19 after they were forced to go into hiding as a mob of far-right supporters of Donald Trump stormed the halls of Congress.

According to the memo, there is a possibility that they were exposed to the deadly coronavirus when they were penned up as Capitol police battled with the invaders after the president encouraged them to march on Congress.

The memo from Dr. Brian P. Monahan states, "During this time, individuals may have been exposed to another occupant with coronavirus infection."

You can see the memo below:


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Roy Blunt on Trump riot: 'The president touched the hot stove on Wednesday and is unlikely to touch it again'

During an interview with CBS host Margaret Brennan on Sunday, Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO) likened a riot incited by President Donald Trump to touching a "hot stove."

"Is the president a danger to the country?" Brennan asked Blunt.

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Jim Jordan seeks 'unity' after trying to overturn election: Impeachment is 'not healthy for the nation'

After trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election, Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) on Sunday argued that impeaching President Donald Trump for inciting a riot is "not healthy for the nation."

Jordan, who had officially objected to the results of the Electoral College, repeatedly insisted during a Fox News interview that now is the time to unify the country.

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