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Republicans fear being 'eaten' alive by the 'extremists and loons' they helped empower: columnist

According to a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit by Dominion Voting Systems, what far-right Fox News pundits say on the air and what they are actually thinking can be two very different things. Dominion, the Washington Post reports, has uncovered actual e-mails and text messages that Fox News hosts like Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity sent during the lame duck period of late 2020 and early 2021 — when attorney Sidney Powell and other allies of then-President Donald Trump were falsely claiming that Dominion's voting equipment was used to help now-President Joe Biden steal the election.

In those e-mails and texts, Fox News pundits acknowledge that Trump lawyers' claims of a stolen election were nonsense. And Dominion alleges that despite knowing the truth, Fox News shamelessly promoted the Big Lie anyway. Fox's attorneys, fighting the lawsuit, have maintained that the cable news outlet's hosts were simply asking questions in late 2020/early 2021 — not going out of their way to promote defamatory lies.

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Trump brutally mocked after tabloid reveals details of his new Mar-a-Lago gig

Critics of President Donald Trump are having a field day after learning about his new hobby.

Page Six reported Friday that the former president “now has a regular gig” as a DJ at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

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DeSantis downplays insurrection and denies responsibility for First Amendment restrictions

Governor Ron DeSantis is denying any responsibility for new Florida restrictions on the First Amendment that ban protests at the state Capitol unless groups requesting a permit are sponsored by a state official and their protest "aligns" with his administration's mission. On Wednesday, DeSantis joked about the January 6, 2021 insurrection while downplaying it as he spoke about the new state policy effectively curtailing the right to protest the government.

"I saw a little report that actually was not something that I was involved with. It didn't necessarily come down from me," DeSantis told reporters as he stood in front of a small airplane at a podium with a sign that read "Biden's Border Crisis."

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Enough is enough: Droves of angry teachers across the country are quitting — and not quietly

A new trend on Tiktok, known as #TeacherQuittok, is showing masses of teachers sharing their stories as they leave their increasingly hostile workplaces, VICE News reported on Friday.

Nick "TheTejanoTeacher" Muniz, "a 31-year-old former high school teacher, used his video to share how unsure he was about leaving the only job he ever wanted, and what he found helpful during his transition," reported Trone Dowd. "He told VICE News that for teachers, who often let their profession become their identities, TikTok tell-alls made by others who left can be comforting, and provide an invaluable resource."

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'Bananas' Ron DeSantis education bill ripped apart by law professor

Julian Davis Mortenson, a professor at the University of Michigan School of Law, ripped apart Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' new bill regulating higher education, which he said was a full-frontal attack on academic freedom.

Writing on Twitter, Mortenson described the DeSantis bill as "bananas" and highlighted some particularly egregious sections that he said would strangle the freedom of professors to teach their students.

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‘We only teach facts’: FIU students, faculty protest against DeSantis’ higher ed tactics

MIAMI — Holding signs with phrases like “We only teach facts” and chanting “Hey DeSantis we’re no fools, we won’t let you run our schools,” at least 100 students, faculty and others marched around the main campus of Florida International University Thursday afternoon to protest Gov. Ron DeSantis’ education agenda. In the past month, DeSantis has escalated his fight against the so-called “woke left” in higher education in Florida. He said he wants to defund and eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs on college campuses in the state. He required universities to submit detailed inform...

Republicans to stage first US presidential debate in Wisconsin

The Republican Party is planning to hold its first US presidential primary debate in August in Wisconsin, a swing state Democrat Joe Biden won by just 20,000 votes in 2020.

The Republican National Committee confirmed in an email to members the organization had voted for the debate to take place in the Badger State's largest city Milwaukee at the same time as its summer meeting.

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GOP's Trump alternatives falling flat as 'fever of Trumpism' continues to burn: analysis

Candidates moving to challenge former President Donald Trump for the 2024 nomination, like South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, have tried to position themselves as the face of a younger, more optimistic and policy-minded Republican Party. They are bolstered by polling that suggests that Republican voters want a different candidate than Trump.

But there's a problem, commentator Molly Jong-Fast wrote for Vanity Fair on Thursday. Not many Republicans want to move on from Trump — and even fewer want to move on from Trumpism.

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Kyle Rittenhouse accused of trying to evade lawsuit

A federal judge is reviewing a request from attorneys for a man injured in a shooting by Kyle Rittenhouse after the attorneys state that Rittenhouse is purposely avoiding them, according to The Associated Press.

The attorneys for Gaige Grosskreutz, who has sought a legal name change because of death threats, have stated that the original deadline given by U.S. District Judge Lynn Adelman for Rittenhouse and other defendants is not timely because Rittenhouse is dodging being served, as he was added to the lawsuit last week along with other city of Kenosha officials.

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Alarms raised about DeSantis journalist lawsuit bill: 'Never seen anything remotely like this'

Free press advocates are raising alarms about Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis's new bill that would make it easier to sue journalists.

As Politico reports, the new bill would loosen libel laws that for decades have protected journalists from lawsuits from public figures.

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Ron DeSantis' office announces 'boycott' of NBC after Andrea Mitchell's criticism

A spokesman for Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) has announced that the governor will be "boycotting" NBC and MSNBC, over remarks that Andrea Mitchell made about his education policy during an interview with Vice President Kamala Harris, according to The Daily Beast.

"'This will be the standard response from our office until @mitchellreports apologizes and your track record improves,' DeSantis' Press Secretary Bryan Griffin tweeted Wednesday, urging others to pass his message along," reported Matt Young. However, Young noted, this is unlikely to mean much in practice because "DeSantis has never been a regular on the NBC circuit."

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Republicans are in 'intellectual collapse' as they push bans on everything that scares them

Republicans are facing an "intellectual collapse" — and their turn to increasingly anti-democracy and anti-free speech policies is the result of that, argued MSNBC's Joy Reid on Wednesday.

Her argument came during a discussion with political stategists Cornell Belcher and Matthew Dowd of the demand by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) to enact a "national divorce" — a euphemism for Republican-controlled states seceding from the United States.

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After legislative fix, court dismisses lawsuit against DeSantis over migrant flights

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — In a seven-minute hearing, a Leon County Circuit Court judge dismissed a case against Gov. Ron DeSantis Wednesday brought by a state senator over flights funded by Florida that took migrants to Martha’s Vineyard from Texas last year. Both parties agreed that the Florida Legislature had repealed the portion of the law that was used as a basis for the lawsuit accusing the governor of illegally flying migrants to Massachusetts last September and therefore should be dismissed. State Sen. Jason Pizzo, a Hollywood Democrat, sued the governor and the Florida Department of Transpor...