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'Treacherous march of normalization': ABC News slammed for 'puff piece' on Moms for Liberty

ABC News is under fire for its enthusiastic profile of Moms for Liberty, a designated extremist anti-government group that has focused its attacks on the LGBTQ community including children.

Moms for Liberty held a five-day convention in Philadelphia that ended this weekend. Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, and Nikki Haley were among the GOP presidential candidates who addressed the group, with Haley claiming they had been labeled a “terrorist” organization. Her response? “Well, then count me as a Mom for Liberty, because that’s what I am.”

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'People are mad': Trump surges among Iowa Republicans fired up over 'legal lynching'

Cheerleaders for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' presidential campaign continue to hope that former President Donald Trump's legal problems will give DeSantis an advantage, but so far, that isn't happening.

A Fox News poll released on June 28 found DeSantis' trailing Trump by 34 percent among 2024 GOP presidential primary voters. Polls released several days before that showed Trump ahead of DeSantis by 29 percent (NBC News) or 38 percent (Emerson College).

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'Mockery': Openly gay GOP ex-lawmaker ditches DeSantis over 'disgusting' anti-LGBTQ attack ad

A former Republican state lawmaker says she was “Team DeSantis” before the Florida GOP governor and flailing presidential candidate’s campaign over the weekend promoted a viciously anti-LGBTQ ad she says is part of his “morally wrong” and “politically misguided” attacks on LGBTQ people. Now, she says, “you couldn’t pay” her to vote for him.

The ad, which she calls “the most anti-LGBTQ+ ad in recent history,” is a video (below) that went viral on social media with more than 20 million views after it was reposted by Ron DeSantis‘ presidential campaign. In an apparent effort to sway far-right Republican voters over to DeSantis, it falsely paints Donald Trump as pro-LGBTQ and the Florida governor as a warrior against the LGBTQ community.

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'Appalling and politically incoherent': CNN analyst drops the hammer on DeSantis' latest strategy

Former Rep. Max Rose (D-NY) shredded Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis after a super PAC affiliated with his presidential campaign put out an ad that attacked former President Donald Trump over a speech in which he pledged to protect LGBTQ Americans from mass shootings carried out by Islamic State-inspired terrorists.

After CNN played the ad, Rose said that the ad was not only in poor taste, but was likely to flop with Republican primary voters.

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'I’m the biggest racist': DeSantis skewered after axing state programs

Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis is proud to run his "War on Woke" 2024 presidential campaign that includes advocating for book bans, anti-LGBTQ+ laws, as well as anti-diversity, equity, and inclusion programs both in schools and the workplace.

On Sunday, the 2024 GOP hopeful shared a clip of himself speaking and signing legislation via Twitter, writing, "As of July 1st, DEI is over in the state of Florida."

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Investigation finds no evidence supporting conspiracy-fueled voter fraud claims in Nebraska battleground district

PAPILLION, Nebraska — An outside investigation of populist-fed fears about voting problems, funded by Sarpy County taxpayers, found no evidence of voter fraud and only a handful of mistakes by poll workers, none of which changed an election outcome.
The investigation, funded by Sarpy County Attorney Lee Polikov with $88,000 from his budget, explored the allegations from 52 affidavits gathered or shared by right-wing activists who said they got them going door-to-door to verify voter addresses.

The 32-page report, issued Friday after a year of work, said many of the 57 total complaints Sarpy County received about the 2020 general election and the 2022 primary election raised concerns about voting in other states and jurisdictions beyond the investigator’s scope.

Handful of problems

The report identified a handful of local problems, including one poll worker who thanked a voter for showing ID before Nebraska required voters to show one, which election experts said could have spooked someone else in line without an ID from voting.

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Trump needles tiny Ron DeSantis event — after lying about his own rally crowd size

Former President Donald Trump reposted a photo of Gov. Ron DeSantis' (R-FL) 2024 presidential campaign event showing a significantly smaller crowd size than his own rally in South Carolina.

The "retruth" of a fan showed a screen capture of CNN coverage of DeSantis' Nevada rally compared to the Trump fan's photos of the Trump event. The differences were just as evident as the photos of Trump's inauguration matched with former President Barack Obama.

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Ron DeSantis is 'losing' voters and 'alienating' them: columnist

The Guardian's Richard Luscombe can't help but notice that Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) appears to have peaked too soon, and the more people get to know him, the less they want to vote for him. Luscombe has dubbed it "how to lose friends and alienate people." It's a take off of Dale Carnegie's "How to Win Friends and Influence People."

"By almost every measure, the rightwinger has had another lackluster week on the campaign trail, with 'clumsy' missteps in New Hampshire, Texas, California and New York," the report explained. "Now, barely one month after his glitch-ridden launch on Twitter, DeSantis finds himself sinking in the polls, closer to the large field of optimists below him than the twice-indicted, twice-impeached former president who retains a stranglehold over the Republican Party."

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Pete Buttigieg perfectly mocks Ron DeSantis for campaign ad with 'oiled-up shirtless bodybuilders'

U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg mocked a campaign advertisement created by Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis' team.

While speaking to CNN's Dana Bash on Sunday, Buttigieg was asked about an ad slamming former President Donald Trump's past pledges to protect the rights of LGBT people.

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'Race to the right': Anti-LGBTQ DeSantis video reportedly takes page out of Trump's book

The Ron DeSantis War Room recently posted an anti-LGBTQ video that attacked Trump for pro-LGBTQ statements and was criticized as homophobic by some Republican groups, but the tactic DeSantis backers are using comes straight from Trump himself, according to a report from the New York Times on Saturday.

DeSantis in the past has said he doesn't care about people's sexuality and that Republicans should stay out of the "bathroom wars," yet today the governor is harnessing anger around those issues to be used in his bid for the Republican nomination, according to Nicholas Nehamas and Maggie Haberman of the Times.

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Florida hospitals will now ask about your immigration status

Hospitals ask patients a lot of personal questions. Medical history? Medications? Preexisting conditions? Smoke, drink or do drugs? As of Saturday, you’ll have one more question to answer: What’s your immigration status? Florida hospitals that accept Medicaid will be required to query patients about that, although a person can decline to answer. The measure is just one of many in a new bill, SB 1718, approved by the Florida Legislature and signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis in May to crack down on the flow of illegal immigration into the state. The new law does not apply to other healthcare providers...

'Makes me so angry!': Trump's ex-press secretary lashes out at his sloppiness with docs

Donald Trump has been reckless in his handling of classified documents to the point that it brings his own former press secretary to the point of anger.

Stephanie Grisham, Trump's former White House press secretary and communications director, appeared on MSNBC on Saturday to discuss the newest revelations with Trump's criminal indictment for purported mishandling of classified materials post-presidency. Grisham is first asked by the host if she had ever crossed paths with Susie Wiles, whom many have speculated is one of the aides who was shown a classified document, according to the indictment.

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'Unrealistic' RNC is making it near impossible for Trump's rivals to appear at debates

With the Republican National Committee setting guidelines for the minimum requirements needed to participate in the GOP's 2024 presidential debates, a report from Politico suggested that, if those standards aren't changed, only Donald Trump and his four closest rivals will appear next month with the majority of candiadtes left watching on TV.

According to the report from Politico's Steven Shepard, a reliance on polls — and the type of polls used — is creating an uphill battle for low-polling candidates to set foot on the stage.

Noting that a candidate "must earn 1 percent in three polls" to join the debate next month, Shepard explained that the devil is in the details.

"The RNC’s criteria exclude virtually all of the public surveys conducted these days, meaning there may not be many opportunities for the lower-polling candidates to even hit that 1 percent," he wrote before adding, "According to the RNC’s guidelines, in order to count for debate qualifying, polls have to survey at least 800 'likely' primary voters or caucus-goers. That criteria aren’t just strict — they’re unrealistic."

As it stands now, besides Trump only Gov. Ron DeSantis (FL), former Vice President Mike Pence, ex-South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) would make the cut.

ALSO IN THE NEWS: Revealed: Trump also tried to pressure Arizona governor to overturn 2020 election results

According to Shepard, "As the 51-day qualifying period begins on Saturday, a review of FiveThirtyEight’s database of GOP primary polling nationally and in the four early 'carve out' states shows that only two polls out of 70 conducted in the previous 51 days would meet those requirements," adding, "With only a handful of polls, candidates like former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson who are only at 1 percent in about half of the prior surveys may not be able to get the three polls they need. And even candidates who are typically at or above 1 percent like former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie or Vivek Ramaswamy — could be in danger of missing out if they register an inopportune goose egg."

There are also problems stemming from the decreasing number of voters who identify as Republicans, with the Politico report stating, "most major national polls start with a sample size of around 1,000 respondents, and Republican primary voters — like their counterparts in the other party — make up a minority of the country. Getting to a sample size of 800 primary voters would require doubling the size of most of these samples — at roughly double the financial cost."

Asked to defend the rules that could exclude a substantial number of presidential aspirants, a spokesperson for the RNC issued a statement saying, "We are ensuring quality polls are used to determine which candidates make the debate stage and we are confident that there will be enough polls for our candidates to qualify."

You can read more here.