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Trump isn't MAGA enough for far-right activists who threaten to rally around Kanye West

On Monday, Rolling Stone reported that far-right figures are flocking to rapper Kanye West, also known by the mononym "Ye," as a potentially more authentic standard bearer of the MAGA movement than former President Donald Trump himself — or at the very least, as a person who could send a message to Trump to step up his game in supporting white nationalism.

"The prospect of the rapper campaigning against Trump from the right is bringing glee to the deplorables set," reported Tim Dickinson and Nikki McCann Ramirez. "They see Ye as — if not a viable candidate — a political force that could keep Trump from drifting away from the extremes as he prepares for electoral combat with Florida’s anti-woke governor, Ron DeSantis. In his own recap of his Mar-a-Lago meeting with Trump, for example, Ye claims he pressed Trump: 'Why, when you had the chance, did you not free the Jan. 6-ers?'"

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Don't expect Ron DeSantis to denounce the neo-Nazis and white supremacists in the GOP: columnist

New York Magazine writer Jonathan Chait warned that there's no chance that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) is going to do anything to fix the extremism problem in the Republican Party were he to take over after Donald Trump.

Last week, Trump welcomed white supremacists and neo-Nazis Kanye "Ye" West and Nick Fuentes to Mar-a-Lago. Republicans have remained largely silent while others claimed Trump didn't know who Fuentes was. Trump also said he didn't know who David Duke was despite being told that he was a previous member of a racist hate group. Retired Gen. John Kelly, who worked last Trump's longest-serving chief of staff, said that the former president praised Adolf Hitler and those that remained loyal to him, while they were traveling in Europe to commemorate the World War II allies. Trump also championed Hitler's "economic miracle," which was previously a 1930s Nazi talking point.

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Former officials blast pro-Israel special interest group for funding Republican antisemitism

President Donald Trump welcoming a neo-Nazi and white supremacist to Mar-a-Lago has dominated the news for the past week — not merely because of the action itself, but because Republican Party members have largely stayed silent.

Republican leaders like Kevin McCarthy, who is clamoring to snag the Speaker's spot, hasn't said a word. Yet, he has attacked Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) for using antisemitic tropes.

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White House on Trump dinner with white supremacist: No place for these 'vile forces' in U.S

By Andrea Shalal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The White House on Monday joined some Republicans in criticizing former U.S. President Donald Trump for dining with white supremacist Nick Fuentes, saying there is no place in America for "vile forces" such as racism, bigotry and anti-Semitism.

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More than a publicity stunt: How Ye's presidential run is designed to drive Trump further to the right

Kanye West’s visit to Mar-a-Lago last week with white nationalist Nicholas Fuentes, followed by his announcement that he’s running for president, might look like a desperate publicity stunt from a rapper whose antisemitic statements have resulted in sponsorship losses and diminished influence.

And on some level, it is.

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GOP and corporate allies going through 'a messy breakup' as Republicans plan pressure campaign

According to a report from Bloomberg, the incoming Republican majority leadership of the House of Representatives has plans to take on corporations that they believe no longer share their values as their longtime relationship continues to fall apart.

As Bloomberg's Laura Davison reported, what business leaders and top Republicans are experiencing is nothing less that a "messy breakup" that is only expected to grow worse should current House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) manage to be elected Speaker replacing current Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA).

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GOP's 'voter fraud' enforcement units 'have provided no indication of systemic problems': report

On Monday, the Orlando Sentinel reported that "voter fraud" units created by Republican officials in several states to investigate election integrity have come up far short of finding evidence for the idea of any notable problems in elections.

"State-level law enforcement units ... created after the 2020 presidential election to investigate voter fraud are looking into scattered complaints more than two weeks after the midterms but have provided no indication of systemic problems," reported Gary Fields, Anthony Izaguirre, and Sudhin Thanawala. Specifically, "Florida, Georgia and Virginia created special state-level units after the 2020 election, all pushed by Republican governors, attorneys general or legislatures."

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The GOP is just not that into Trump — for now

Republicans are not that into Donald Trump's 2024 campaign run, but this movie has played many times before as Republicans feign interest before ultimately submitting to the beloved commander-in-chief of GOP voters.

Politico explained Sunday that Trump’s 2024 announcement has been "followed by a raft of potential 2024 contenders appearing at the Republican Jewish Coalition conference in Las Vegas over the weekend, where at least one Republican who had previously said she would defer to Trump if he ran — former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley — now said she is considering running in a 'serious way.'"

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Some Republicans criticize Trump for meeting with white supremacist

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Some Republicans on Sunday criticized Donald Trump for dining with white supremacist Nick Fuentes at the former president's Mar-A-Lago resort in Florida, even as Trump said the encounter was inadvertent.

Arkansas Republican Governor Asa Hutchinson accused Trump of empowering extremism.

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Republicans will come crawling back to Trump after he 'eats Ron DeSantis alive': Rick Wilson

In an interview with the Guardian's David Smith, former Republican Party campaign consultant Rick Wilson cautioned foes of Donald Trump to contain their enthusiasm at the prospect that his political future is in rapid decline, explaining he fully expects the former president to turn his fortunes around.

Wilson, whose distaste for Trump and all he represents led him to co-found the virulently anti-Trump Lincoln Project with a group of like-minded conservatives, said it is only a matter of time before Trump once again regains the upper hand and that prominent Republicans who have taken shots at him since the midterms will once again "... bend the knee, they will break, they will fall, they will all come back into line."

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About that third person at Donald Trump's dinner with anti-semites

Donald Trump‘s dinner earlier this week with antisemite Kanye West and holocaust denier and white supremacist Nick Fuentes may also have included two other right-wingers, hinted at by the former president himself.

After Axios‘ reporting confirmed that Fuentes had in fact had dinner with Trump, Trump issued a statement saying, “Our dinner meeting was intended to be Kanye and me only, but he arrived with a guest whom I had never met and knew nothing about.”

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Longtime Trump adviser warns 'nightmare' Fuentes meeting is 'another reason' people want 'DeSantis to run'

A longtime adviser to former Donald Trump warned his pre-Thanksgiving Mar-a-Lago dinner with Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, and white supremacist Nick Fuentes will be “another reason why” people look at Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis “to run against” the former president in 2024, NBC News reports.

Trump on Friday denied knowing who Fuentes is, claiming Ye “called me to have dinner” and “unexpectedly showed up with three of his friends, who I knew nothing about.” Three sources who spoke with NBC News corroborated Trump’s assertion “that he didn’t know Fuentes,” but pointed out “one glaring inaccuracy in Trump’s statement,” NBC News’ Marc Caputo reports.

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Trump's 'megadonors' have bailed on him because they feel 'hoodwinked': analyst

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Alex Witt Show" on Saturday, political analyst Ashley Pratte Oates suggested that Donald Trump would be hard-pressed to win the Republican Party 2024 presidential nomination if he is only faced with two or three GOP opponents.

She then added his task will be considerably harder because of his megadonors have soured on him and have their eyes on more amenable possible candidates like Govs. Ron DeSantis (FL) and Glenn Youngkin (VA).

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