Is the Ethics Committee's massive investigation into George Santos wrapping up?

The House Ethics Committee investigating U.S. Rep. George Santos suggested Tuesday some form of movement in its investigation into the 23 criminal felony charges and other allegations against the New York freshman Republican will come soon, but a resolution to expel Santos from the House may come first. The committee says its "next course of action" will be announced by November 17. Experts suggest Tuesday's announcement might delay any possible expulsion vote.

In addition to the 23 federal felonies the committee is investigating, it says its investigation also includes "multiple allegations of criminal and ethical violations that are beyond the scope of the indictments."

Keep reading... Show less

House Republican brags about using emergency Israel aid bill as tool to corner Congress

U.S. Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA), the chair of the far-right House Freedom Caucus and allegedly “central to the planning of January 6,” is bragging about Speaker Mike Johnson's legislation tying emergency aid to help Israel combat Hamas terrorists with Republicans' efforts to defund the IRS.

When House Republicans unveiled their bill Monday afternoon, reaction was immediate. Critics are blasting Speaker Johnson and the GOP for, as one top Democratic staffer said, "exploiting a war to pass a tax cut for the rich."

Keep reading... Show less

GOP may soon regret making Dems' 'dream candidate' Mike Johnson their leader: analysis

House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) could become a lightning rod in next year's midterm elections, and his extremism could endanger the Republican majority.

The Louisiana Republican was a little-known back-bencher until he came out on top following a three-week scramble to replace the ousted Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), but MSNBC columnist Michael A. Cohen said Johnson would be a "dream candidate" for Democrats to run against.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump has 'far more to lose' as 'unforced gaffes' indicate mental decline: report

Plans by the Republican Party to make President Joe Biden's age a central theme of the 2024 presidential campaign could be heading for a speedbump as presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump stumbles through speeches — raising questions about his mental decline.

On MSNBC's "Morning Joe" Monday, the panel raised concern after watching clips of the former president mistaking where he was as he gave a speech, while calling a foreign leader a great friend and then linking him to the wrong country.

Keep reading... Show less

Selling hate, vulgarity and violence: How Trump and MAGA overran a quaint Midwest festival

MANSFIELD, Ind. — The name Covered Bridge Festival evokes images of artisans selling their wares under the country sun and live music delighting passersby, all while celebrating quaint structures built more than a century ago to protect the wooden crossing from the weather.

The unsuspecting, however, encounter something much different at this west-central Indiana town, one of several sites for the decades-old event in Parke County.

Keep reading... Show less

Taking the 5th won't save Trump family members in Judge Engoron's courtroom

Appearing on MSNBC on Sunday morning, former U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade explained that, should Donald Trump and his three children who will be taking the stand in a Manhattan courtroom in the coming weeks attempt to plead the 5th, it could make matters worse for them.

Speaking with fill-in MSNBC host Charles Coleman Jr., McQuade noted that the testimony before Judge Arthur Engoron is part of a civil trial and the use of the constitutional amendment regarding self-incrimination is applied differently than in a criminal trial.

With Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump about to face a grilling by prosecutors working for New York Attorney General Letitia James. McQuade stated the use of the 5th allows the judge in this case to assume the worst.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"One of the things that's really interesting, Charles, in a civil case, is whether a witness chooses to invoke their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination," she began.

"It's not that they're going to be incriminated here, it's that anything they say under oath could be used against them in some subsequent criminal case," she added. "If they believe they have exposure, they can invoke it. But what's different about a civil case from a criminal case is that in this case, Judge Engoron could use that invocation to draw an adverse inference against the witness."

"So if they refused to answer a question, he can assume the worst about what the answer would have been," she elaborated. "I think that's what I'll be looking for most as these witnesses testify this week."

Watch below or at the link:

Keep reading... Show less

Republican congressman gets jacked by thief

WASHINGTON — Rep. Ken Calvert (R-CA) is so concerned about mail fraud that he introduced legislation that would double the penalties for those convicted of theft via the U.S. Postal Service.

Now, it appears Calvert himself has fallen victim to the kind of fraud he's trying to prevent — the latest in a litany of lawmakers and political committees who together have lost millions of dollars in political cash to recent financial criminals.

Keep reading... Show less

'Lunatic' Speaker Mike Johnson blasted for tying mass shootings to teaching evolution

Newly sworn-in Speaker Mike Johnson's record is being rapidly unearthed and critics are expressing anger and outrage that House Republicans have elevated what some are calling a far-right Christian nationalist to become the third most-powerful elected official in the country.

"While preaching a sermon in 2016," MeidasTouch Network reports Thursday, "Johnson blamed mass shootings on the teaching of evolution."

Keep reading... Show less

‘I really am sincerely sorry’: Rep. Jamaal Bowman on his alarming ‘unforced error’

WASHINGTON – After Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-NY) pulled a fire alarm in a House Office Building last month, Republicans – from then-Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) to Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) – pounced.

Some called for his expulsion, while others accused the progressive lawmaker of being an insurrectionist.

Keep reading... Show less

Lawmakers mad as congressional UFO briefing gives few details – because they're classified

Democrats and Republicans are miffed after they were denied answers to some of their questions in a Defense Department briefing Thursday.

The classified briefing took place in the Capitol's sensitive compartmented information facility (SCIF), where Republican Reps. Eric Burlison (MO) and Tim Burchett (TN) joined Democratic Rep. Jared Moskowitz (FL) in saying that their questions couldn't be answered.

Keep reading... Show less

Colorado Republicans turn on Lauren Boebert over 'indefensible' Beetlejuice gropefest

Rep. Lauren Boebert's groping session with a date that led to her being booted from a performance of the "Beetlejuice" play is casting a major cloud over her re-election prospects in 2024 as GOP heavy-hitters in her home state are lining up behind a primary challenger.

The controversial Colorado Republican, who barely eked out a victory over her Democratic challenger Adam Frisch by a 546 vote margin, now faces the prospect of not winning the GOP primary as the GOp leadership in Colorado admit they are tired of her act.

Keep reading... Show less

'How many cheerleaders did he grope?’ Fans share outrage at Trump’s Iowa State game visit

Former President Donald Trump was not an invited guest of Iowa State University for last month’s football game against the University of Iowa — he had a ticket — but angry fans still vented to school officials about the Trump “circus” trampling on their beloved rivalry.

In emails to Iowa State’s president and athletic director, obtained by Raw Story through an Iowa Open Records Law request, people railed about what baggage Trump might bring to the Sept. 9 event — his 91 felony allegations; a history of not paying bills for security; violent supporters; and a civil jury having found that he sexually abused a woman.

Keep reading... Show less

Top Dem's committee fined $3.5K for campaign finance mistake caused by staffer's death

A top House Democrat’s campaign committee was slapped with a $3,500 fine over a filing mistake made as the group grappled with a consultant’s death, according to Federal Election Commission records and a source close to the campaign.

The committee raising funds for U.S. Rep Jim Clyburn (D-SC) mistakenly filed a financial disclosure report in October 2022 that didn't include about $62,100 in disbursements, according to a letter from the FEC.

Keep reading... Show less