Top Democrat has a plan to get Jack Smith's classified documents report on Trump

WASHINGTON—Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) plans to access the report of special counsel Jack Smith's classified documents before a new attorney general can dismiss the case.

Speaking to Raw Story on Thursday, Raskin said that Donald Trump will likely have his Justice Department "dismiss" the case against his aides Walt Nauta and Carlos de Oliveira "or pardon them."

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Trump allies say FBI failed to stop New Orleans attack due to focus on white supremacy

In the aftermath of the ISIS-inspired terror attack committed by a man who plowed his truck through a crowd of New Year’s Eve revelers and killed 14 people in New Orleans, some of Donald Trump’s allies have suggested the FBI failed to prevent the attack because the agency was too focused on white supremacist investigations.

The criticism leveled at the FBI by Kimberly Guilfoyle, who has received an appointment to serve as ambassador to Greece, and Steve Bannon, the former White House strategist, on Jan. 2 compounds a series of social media posts by the president-elect suggesting that lax security at the border enabled the attack. The rhetoric by the president-elect and his allies ignored the fact that the attacker, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, was a U.S. citizen and Army veteran who lived in Houston.

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'He can't erase it': J6 committee members speak out after final Jack Smith report drops

WASHINGTON — Some members of the House Select Committee investigating the 2020 election and the Jan. 6 attacks are responding now that the Justice Department has published special counsel Jack Smith's final report.

Speaking to Raw Story on Wednesday, Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) said the committee did "good work" that "pointed out Donald Trump's criminality" around the election.

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Sanctioning of global white supremacist terrorism group rattles U.S. extremist members

The State Department has applied the “specially designated global terrorist” designation to the Terrorgram Collective in a groundbreaking move that for the first time sanctions a transnational white supremacist terrorist group with a significant presence in the United States.

The announcement on Monday — one week before President Biden leaves office — justified the designation based on the group “posing a significant risk of committing, or having participated in training to commit acts of terrorism, that threaten the security of United States nationals or national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States.” Terrorgram is an amalgam of the words “terror” and “Telegram,” the latter of which is a social media platform used by members to distribute propaganda.

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'Big misogynist': Female Dem senators give scathing early assessment of Pete Hegseth

WASHINGTON — Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) left the Armed Services Committee hearing on Tuesday after a contentious questioning of Donald Trump nominee Pete Hegseth.

As with many women on the committee, Gillibrand had questions about Hegseth's past stated opposition to women in the military. Specifically, she questioned his previous statement, “I don’t want moms in the military.”

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Powerful Oversight Dem urges Biden to wield immunity — and release Jack Smith report

WASHINGTON — Democrats are split on whether President Joe Biden should use his authority and presidential immunity to release special counsel Jack Smith's report on his cases involving President-elect Donald Trump.

The Supreme Court ruled over the summer that Trump enjoys full immunity for presidential acts. Smith filed a two-volume report addressing the 2020 election case and the classified documents theft case. Attorney General Merrick Garland indicated he would release the election case report, but given that two defendants were still headed to trial, the second volume would be held back.

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'Hell no!': Republican senators unwilling to follow Trump's order to end debt ceiling

WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump told NBC News in a recent interview that the “smartest thing” Republicans could do is to eliminate the debt ceiling altogether.

“The Democrats have said they want to get rid of it. If they want to get rid of it, I would lead the charge,” Trump said.

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GOP senators laugh off idea of Trump invading Greenland — but dodge serious questions

WASHINGTON — Republican senators were cracking jokes and outright laughing at President-elect Donald Trump over his suggestions he's open to using military force in Panama and Greenland, as well as his flirtation with making Canada the 51st state.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-ND) cracked jokes with a dry wit, saying that he would only want to acquire parts of Canada, particularly the more attractive places.

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Jan. 6 committee member snaps back at GOP official demanding Democratic probe

WASHINGTON — Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) is lodging her own accusations against a fellow member after he said he would like an investigation into the House Select Committee that probed the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Punchbowl News reported on Tuesday that Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-GA) would like to see a select committee to investigate the select committee. "Loudermilk had already used his House Administration subcommittee to delve into the topic," the report said. "But with Trump coming back into office and vowing political retribution over the issue, it's clear Republicans want to keep investigating investigations."

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Trump intel advisor Devin Nunes still dismisses Russian election meddling as a 'hoax'

Devin Nunes, the former congressman and MAGA loyalist picked by Donald Trump to chair the Intelligence Advisory Board, has a long history of downplaying Russian interference in U.S. elections.

As recently as last February, Nunes testified in a deposition for a defamation lawsuit that a package he received from someone subsequently deemed by the U.S. Treasury Department as a Russian agent acting under the “purview” of President Vladimir Putin to influence U.S. elections was “just a continued operation of smearing people, trying to tie people to Russia.”

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'It makes me sad': Jan. 6 security leaves many on Capitol Hill triggered

WASHINGTON — Heavy security fencing is back up around the U.S. Capitol ahead of this week’s fourth anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on Congress, which is serving as a painful reminder of that deadly and violent day to many on Capitol Hill.

“It makes me sad,” Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-MI) told Raw Story while fighting back tears Friday. “We’ve seen too many threats this past year. Too many.”

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Finger-pointing and suspicion: Jan. 6 defendants in disarray over potential Trump pardons

Before the 119th Congress convenes today with Vice President Kamala Harris presiding over a joint session to certify Donald Trump’s election win, a group of Jan. 6 defendants and their supporters will hold a press conference at a hotel across town to press the case for blanket pardons when Trump takes the oath of office in two weeks.

Among the scheduled speakers for the press conference is Jake Lang, a Jan. 6 defendant accused of using a stolen police riot shield, helmet and baseball bat to attack officers for more than two hours during a frenzied battle for control of the entrance where the new president customarily emerges on Inauguration Day. Lang, who is currently in jail awaiting trial, is advertised as appearing at the press conference “live from DC Gulag!”

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'Bring it on': Defiant Raskin responds to GOP threats of retaliation for J6 investigation

WASHINGTON — In this new Congress, the Republican Party’s newly empowered ranks of far-right members are set on changing the conversation surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Besides calling on incoming President Donald Trump to pardon those imprisoned for violently storming the Capitol — which Trump has promised to do the day he re-enters the White House — some Republicans are preparing to go after their colleagues who served on the bipartisan select Jan. 6 committee that disbanded in 2023.

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