'Scripture is very clear': New House speaker tells Congress that God has 'ordained' him

Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, in his first remarks after being elected Wednesday afternoon, told members of Congress that “Scripture” and “the Bible” are clear that he has been “ordained” by God.

“I want to tell all my colleagues here what I told the Republicans in that room last night,” Speaker Johnson declared.

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New Speaker Mike Johnson: no assets, lots of debt

Newly elected House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is one of the House of Representatives’ least wealthy members, according to federal financial disclosures reviewed by Raw Story.

Johnson, who won the speakership Wednesday with 220 votes from the entire GOP caucus three weeks after the ouster of former Speaker Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), reported no assets on his latest annual report filed on Aug. 11. He also reported no assets on his 2021 report as well.

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Guilty: Neo-Nazi leader whose group targeted power grid takes a plea deal

Liam Collins, a Marine Corps veteran who helped found a neo-Nazi terror cell accused of planning a terrorist attack on the nation’s power grid, has pleaded guilty to a felony charge of interstate transportation of an unregistered firearm.

While pleading guilty to transporting an illegal firearm, Collins pleaded not guilty to more serious charges of conspiracy to manufacture firearms and ship interstate, and conspiracy to damage an energy facility.

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Tom Emmer accused of holding GOP caucus hostage in speaker vote

WASHINGTON — Rep. Troy Nehls (R-TX) told Raw Story that Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN) doesn't have the votes to get elected the House speaker — and that it's time to move on and nominate Donald Trump instead.

Emmer officially became the party's nomination on Tuesday in a fifth ballot vote — but it's considered unlikely that he'll win a House vote. And GOP caucus members are expecting to be locked in a meeting until he gets the votes he wants.

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GOP congressman — a retired Navy SEAL — uses foreign warship photo in salute to U.S. Navy

Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-MT), whose political identity is closely associated with his background as a Navy SEAL, recently extended birthday wishes to the U.S. Navy on social media — using what appears to be an image of an Indonesian warship.

In a birthday message on X, formerly known as Twitter, a transparent silhouette of the word “NAVY” was overlaid on the ship.

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Trump serves up massively false claim about his 91 criminal charges

At the end of his four years as President, The Washington Post published its final, regularly updated list of all the "false or misleading claims" Donald Trump made, totaling 30,573.

Also at the end of his four years in office, McSweeny's published, "Lest We Forget the Horrors: A Catalog of Trump’s Worst Cruelties, Collusions, Corruptions, and Crimes: The Complete Listing: Atrocities 1 – 1,056."

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Sen. J.D. Vance finally dumps stock in 'slave labor' company

Freshman U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) has sold up to $100,000 in stock he owned in Walmart — a full two years after he bashed the company for using “slave labor” and robbing middle-class Americans of jobs.

Vance made a “full" sale of Walmart on Oct. 3, according to a document filed Monday with the U.S. Senate.

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Trump ‘stiffs law enforcement officers’: Nikki Haley, citing Raw Story

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley issued a statement Monday based on a recent Raw Story article, calling on former President Donald Trump to pay law enforcement who protect his presidential campaign events.

Haley cited Raw Story’s article “Siren: New Hampshire town eats Trump security bills while Haley pays local police,” where Raw Story obtained documents through an open records request showing that Trump’s June 27 visit to Concord, N.H., cost the local police and fire departments $3,778.85.

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Trump’s reported plan for NATO makes him ‘biggest internal threat to national security’

A Rolling Stone report detailing Donald Trump's alleged plan for NATO if he wins the White House next year is making political experts greatly concerned.

" Trump and his team are actively planning to pull the United States out of NATO — or, barring that, kneecap the collective defense provisions at the heart of the alliance," writes Rolling Stone editor-in-chief Noah Shachtman.

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‘MAGA, MAGA and more MAGA’: What experts are saying about 9 GOP candidates for speaker

Legal and political experts are raising red flags about all nine Republican candidates now running for Speaker of the House, warning of their positions, histories, and voting records.

The nine are: House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (MN), Republican Conference Vice Chair Mike Johnson (LA), Republican Study Committee Chair Kevin Hern (OK), Jack Bergman (MI), Byron Donalds (FL), Dan Meuser (PA), Gary Palmer (AL), Austin Scott (GA), and Pete Sessions (TX).

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Ivanka must choose 'between perjury and daddy' if she loses subpoena fight: Legal analyst

Ivanka Trump's attempt to block a subpoena issued by New York Attorney General Letitia James is a losing battle that will end with her in court facing either testifying against her father or facing possible perjury charges, former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance said Monday.

On her Substack platform, Vance suggested that Donald Trump's eldest daughter's attempt to duck the subpoena by claiming that James didn't depose her before the Manhattan fraud trial began, so she can't make her testify now, is a non-starter.

In his filing, Ivanka's attorney asserted, "Trial subpoenas are not a means for parties to get discovery, which they failed to obtain during pretrial proceedings,” before adding, "Ms. Trump is not a party in this action. Nor is Ms. Trump a New York resident. It is black-letter law that, given those two facts, Ms. Trump is beyond the jurisdiction of this Court.”

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According to Vance, trial testimony about Trump's daughter's purchase of a penthouse located in her father’s Trump Park Avenue property, and how it is valued, is germane to the fraud case.

Writing, "She is nonetheless a fact witness in this regard, and it seems likely she’ll be ordered to testify," Vance noted, "The Attorney General says that although Ms. Trump has denied it, she benefitted from 'insider' pricing — she had an option to buy the penthouse for $8.5 million, but the Trump Organization’s financial statements valued the unit at $20,820,000."

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Michael Cohen on how long it'll take Alina Habba to be admonished in NY fraud questioning

MSNBC's Katie Phang reported Sunday that Donald Trump's lawyer Alina Habba will be the one to do the questioning of Michael Cohen in court on Tuesday. Habba was also the lawyer on the Trump team who interviewed Cohen for his deposition.

Cohen's testimony last week was delayed by an injury, and while Trump tried to mock him for not having the "guts" to face him, Cohen made it clear the testimony was merely delayed, not canceled.

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‘He made it up’: Police say George Santos lied about Chinese communists kidnapping

During a series of phone calls with a New York Times journalist, Rep. George Santos (R-NY) claimed that his extended family was victimized by the Chinese Communist government which was behind the brief kidnapping of his niece.

According to a police official: it never happened.

In an extensive piece for the Times, journalist Grace Ashford detailed a history of receiving calls from the embattled lawmaker at all hours, where he alternately defended himself and complained about the turn his life has taken since entering Congress, one time claiming, "I literally threw my entire life into the toilet and flushed it to get elected.”

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

In the midst of those calls, he claimed his niece had been abducted in Queens and hinted the Chinese Communist government was possibly behind it.

According to Ashford, Santos was complaining about the threats he has faced when he confessed to her, "I’ll give you one, I’ll give you one story that nobody talks about,” she wrote before adding that he related, "... how his 5-year-old niece disappeared from a playground in Queens, only to be located 40 minutes later on a surveillance camera with two Chinese men. He said the incident was the subject of an active police investigation, implying heavily that it might have been in retaliation for his vocal stance against the Chinese Communist Party."

“So you think it was China?” the journalist asked, with Santos reportedly replying, "Look, I don’t want to go into like, conspiracy theory. But you know, if the shoe fits, right?”

Curious about the wild accusation Ashford wrote, "There was one other question that was bothering me as well: his story about the Chinese Communist Party kidnapping. I reached out to a colleague with connections to law enforcement officials to learn more about the investigation."

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