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Ron DeSantis

GOP voters start to look at other options as Trump's role on Jan. 6 becomes clearer

As the Jan. 6 committee reconvened for another round of hearings, the question remains: Will the Justice Department indict former President Donald Trump for his role in the assault on the U.S. Capitol?

In public testimony, the evidence is mounting against Trump.

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Election officials warn about 'insider threats' to voting by local officials loyal to Trump

Election administrators are worried about "insider threats" to the election system from local officials who remain loyal to Donald Trump.

Officials who gathered for the National Association of Secretaries of State’s summer conference told Politico that cases in Colorado, where a county clerk was indicted for giving unauthorized access to voting machines, and others in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Ohio had raised concerns about upcoming efforts to undermine election security.

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DeSantis held meeting with Huckabee Sanders and GOP bigwigs as 2024 rumors swirl

With reports swirling that Gov. DeSantis (R-FL) has an eye on supplanting an aspiring Donald Trump as the Republican Party's 2024 presidential nominee, Politico notes that the Florida governor held a recent informal "get to know each other" meet-up with Republican governors from key states as well as donors and conservative "influencers" in Ft. Lauderdale recently.

Among those attending was former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders who is currently the frontrunner to become the next governor of Arkansas -- following in the footsteps of her father Mike Huckabee.

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WATCH: Joe Scarborough hilariously impersonates Trump fans obsessing over Kamala Harris

On Monday morning, MSNBC "Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough pulled off a hilarious impression of fans of Donald Trump obsessively perusing stories critical of Vice President Kamala Harris while ignoring the fact that she and President Joe Biden still outpoll the former president in head to head match-ups.

As co-hosts Mika Brzezinski and Jonathan Lemire looked on laughing, Scarborough went on an extended rant ridiculing followers of Trump saying disparaging reports about Harris proves "I am a superior as a white man in my mother's basement."

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Ron DeSantis’ handpicked 'radical far-right' secretary of state will oversee his race

Democrats and election experts have sounded the alarm for months about the growing risk of election subversion as conspiracy theorists backed by former President Donald Trump run for secretary of state in key swing states. But with little fanfare or media attention, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis earlier this year hand-picked a right-wing ally who refuses to acknowledge President Joe Biden's 2020 victory to oversee his re-election race.

Around the country, Republicans pushing Trump's "Big Lie" about the 2020 election are running to win jobs overseeing the next election. Trump loyalist Jim Marchant, who baselessly claims that elections have been illegitimate for more than a decade, recently won the Republican nomination for secretary of state in Nevada. The Michigan Republican Party is backing Kristina Karamo, who has pushed ludicrous conspiracy theories about the 2020 race being stolen. Trump has also endorsed Mark Finchem as Arizona's next secretary of state after he attended the Jan. 6 Capitol rally and introduced a bill to decertify 2020 election results.

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MSNBC hosts laugh at Trump for being too scared of his own base to mention 'vaccines' but too arrogant not to

MSNBC hosts Mehdi Hasan and Ayman Mohyeldin exchanged a chuckle over former President Donald Trump's rally this weekend in which he confessed that he wasn't supposed to mention the word "vaccine."

"We did so much in terms of therapeutics," Trump told his audience. "And a word I'm not allowed to mention, but I'm still proud of that word. Cause we did it — we did that in nine months, and it was supposed to take five years to 12 years. Nobody else could have done it, but I'm not mentioning it in front of my people."

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Right wing's new social studies plan 'American Birthright' elevates Western civilization, pushes Christianity and rejects all talk of 'social justice'

In late June, a conservative education coalition called the Civics Alliance released a new set of social studies standards for K-12 schools, with the intention of promoting it as a model for states nationwide. These standards, entitled "American Birthright," are framed as yet another corrective to supposedly "woke" public schools, where, according to Republicans, theoretical frameworks like critical race theory are only one part of a larger attack on the foundations of American democracy.

"Too many Americans have emerged from our schools ignorant of America's history, indifferent to liberty, filled with animus against their ancestors and their fellow Americans, and estranged from their country," reads the introduction to "American Birthright." (The "birthright" here refers to "freedom.") And the fields of history and civics, it suggests, exemplify the worst of that trend. "The warping of American social studies instruction has created a corps of activists dedicated to the overthrow of America and its freedoms, larger numbers of Americans indifferent to the steady whittling away of American liberty, and many more who are so ignorant of the past they cannot use our heritage of freedom to judge contemporary debates."

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'Bloodied and bruised' Trump has Republican voters looking elsewhere: conservative

According to conservative Matt Lewis, it is finally sinking into Republican voters that former President Donald Trump is damaged goods and that the best way forward is to look for a new GOP standard-bearer.

In his column for the Daily Beast, Lewis said that there is no perfect candidate to replace the former president when it comes to being the GOP's 2024 presidential nominee and, at this point, "any port in a storm" is better than Trump.

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Educators sound the alarm on DeSantis' classroom censorship

In his latest effort to regulate higher education, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation back in April that will allow the state to oversee the inner workings of universities, or what DeSantis referred to as a "hotbed for stale ideologies." The series of regulations, collectively called the "Stop W.O.K.E. Act," took effect on July 1st and includes changes to the tenure system, the abolishment of widely accepted accreditation practices, and mandatory yearly "viewpoint diversity surveys" — perhaps the most controversial part of the new regime. The law also places a ban on training focused on race or diversity in schools and in the workplace.

"It used to be thought that a university campus was a place where you'd be exposed to a lot of different ideas," DeSantis said at a press conference earlier this year. "Unfortunately, now the norm is, these are more intellectually repressive environments. You have orthodoxies that are promoted, and other viewpoints are shunned or even suppressed."

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GOP congresswoman gets called out after bragging about infrastructure improvements she voted against

When President Joe Biden signed a $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill into law in November 2021, the members of Congress who took a victory lap included centrist Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina — both of whom played a key role in the negotiations. But many GOP members of Congress, anxious to show how MAGA they were, opposed the bill and attacked it as “socialism.”

One of the bill’s critics was Rep. Beth Van Duyne of Texas. Van Duyne voted against it, but on July 7, she bragged about new funding for the Dallas/Ft. Worth Airport — funding coming from the infrastructure bill she opposed in 2021:

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Trump looms large as Republicans scope out 2024 presidential prospects in Iowa midterm campaigns

U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton spent his Wednesday afternoon at Jethro’s BBQ ‘n Bacon Bacon in West Des Moines. He didn’t come for the food: The Arkansas conservative came to help Iowa Sen. Zach Nunn launch his campaign’s veteran coalition, offering his support in the race against incumbent U.S. Rep. Cindy Axne.

It’s not the senator’s first visit to Iowa this year. It’s his eighth since 2019. And while Cotton said his visits to Iowa are to help elect Republicans in November, Iowa Republicans are well aware of why political figures flock to their state.

“So we have Senator Cotton, Tom and his, wife, Anna, come out and join us because there’s a lot of people here in Iowa who like your leadership,” Nunn said. “And oh, I like to think that people come here and support Kelly and me, but it just so happens that Iowa’s 3rd (District) happens to be on the pathway to a certain house somewhere down the road.”

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Republicans scope out 2024 presidential prospects in Iowa's midterm campaigns

U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton spent his Wednesday afternoon at Jethro’s BBQ ‘n Bacon Bacon in West Des Moines. He didn’t come for the food: The Arkansas conservative came to help Iowa Sen. Zach Nunn launch his campaign’s veteran coalition, offering his support in the race against incumbent U.S. Rep. Cindy Axne.

It’s not the senator’s first visit to Iowa this year. It’s his eighth since 2019. And while Cotton said his visits to Iowa are to help elect Republicans in November, Iowa Republicans are well aware of why political figures flock to their state.

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Kellyanne Conway says 'sad and frustrated' Trump needs to stop obsessing over 2020 if he wants to be in the White House again

Former senior Donald Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway expressed her concern about the Republican leader's obsession about the 2020 election, the Washington Times reported.

Trump continues to watch the House Select Committee footage, posting comments on his social media site and ranting about people who worked for him.

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