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'Most egregious example yet': Fact-checker calls Trump ad worst he's seen

Donald Trump's campaign has deployed deceptively edited quotes in a number of its television ads during the election campaign, but CNN fact-checker Daniel Dale called out its latest spot as the "most egregious example yet."

The former president's recent campaign spots are littered with deceptively edited quotations that omit critical words or present misleading comments from Trump's campaign or administration officials as if they were taken from independent news organizations, but Dale said a new ad on Kamala Harris' tax policies may be the worst yet.

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J.D. Vance on Trump rally joke: ‘Maybe it’s a stupid racist joke' — but 'maybe it's not'

Trump Republican vice-presidential running mate JD Vance appears to be trying to whitewash a racist attack on Puerto Rico, made Sunday by an invited comedian at Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally, whose “joke” has led to massive outrage, especially by Latino Americans, and led some to ask if it could cost the GOP the White House.

Tony Hinchcliffe described the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico as a “floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean,” and said, “these Latinos, they love making babies, too, just know that. They do, they do. There’s no pulling out. They don’t do that. They come inside, just like they did to our country,” before he began talking about Black people carving watermelons.

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'Grift and greed': Whistleblower from inside Trump campaign makes explosive claims

An ad buyer who said she was fired by the Donald Trump campaign after trying to expose alleged "grift and greed" by top campaign officials and deep distrust at the operation's highest levels has spoken out to the Daily Beast.

The fired worker told the Beast under the condition of anonymity that she wrote an email after she was terminated that laid out her concerns that the campaign's most senior leaders — Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles — appeared to be directing millions of dollars toward companies that may be overcharging the former president. One of them, she said, is run by a major Kamala Harris donor.

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Why do people still back Trump after everything? A scientist explains

For many people, especially those leaning left, Donald Trump’s disqualifications to be president seem obvious, prompting some to question: How could anyone still vote for Trump?

Some of the evidence Trump’s critics cite include his two impeachments, multiple criminal indictments at the state and federal levels and a felony conviction. Opponents also say that Trump is a threat to democracy, a misogynist, racist, a serial liar and a rapist.

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Leaked memo reveals plan for Trump to skip 'traditional background checks' if elected: NYT

An internal memo from those closest to Donald Trump puts forth a plan for the former president to "bypass traditional background checks" and give appointees "immediate access to classified secrets after taking office," according to Maggie Haberman of the New York Times.

Haberman, along with Jonathan Swan and Charlie Savage, on Sunday published a piece in which they reveal the details of the memo, which "says that if elected he should use private firms to check appointees’ backgrounds and give them immediate access to classified secrets after taking office."

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GOP Senate candidate used $160M meant for local job creation to pay off investors: report

A Republican Senate candidate running on his private sector experience is now being scrutinized for a deal in which he sided with wealthy investors over his own would-be constituents.

NBC News reported Tuesday that Tim Sheehy — who is running against Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) in a competitive Senate race — has yet to explain why jobs his company promised to Montanans have yet to materialize.

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'Virtually nothing is correct': Fact checker left stunned by Trump swing state attack ad

Former President Donald Trump's new swing state attack ad against Vice President Kamala Harris is so full of exaggerations and falsehoods that it baffled a local authority and stunned a Washington Post fact checker.

Trump's recent pitch to Michigan autoworkers was described as "bombastic," "false" and "misleading" in a Washington Post analysis from Glenn Kessler Tuesday morning.

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'It’s a real thing': Ex-GOP official says 'whisper caucus' of Republicans will pick Harris

One Republican former statewide elected official from one of the most important swing states thinks there's a burgeoning movement within his own party that could prove decisive in the November election.

In a recent NBC News report, former Georgia Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan — who has endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris — described how many Republicans are susceptible to "peer pressure" in politics. According to Duncan, his fellow Republicans are likely to say they'll vote for former President Donald Trump to each other, but cast their ballot for Harris in the private comfort of the voting booth.

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Alarms raised over Trump's secretive transition plans if he wins in November: report

Donald Trump's transition team is taking an unprecedented step and refusing to file the paperwork that would be needed as part of the peaceful transfer of power should he win re-election in November.

According to a report from Politico's Hailey Fuchs and Meridith McGraw, the Trump team's "go it alone" approach does deny them transition funding and assistance to assume power swiftly and seamlessly, but by balking at doing the necessary paperwork, it allows them to keep hidden their plans and raise unlimited amounts of cash without disclosing who is making the donations.

As the report notes, "if Trump wins the election and continues to drag his feet on signing the agreement with the White House, it will limit the information he and his team can access to understand current federal operations and challenges."

ALSO READ: He’s a sociopath:' J.D. Vance has Congressional Democrats freaking out

Politico is reporting that a ragged start to a second Trump presidency has some government experts concerned.

According to Rich Bagger, who served as the former executive director for Trump’s pre-election 2016 transition, there is "serious work that needs to take place that, it just seemed to me, was facilitated by being … fully integrated into the transition structure.”

The report notes, "A person involved in the Trump transition said that they are exploring a 'spectrum' of legal options for working with the current administration, including signing and not signing the GSA agreements, and the potential implications," before ominously adding, "By not signing the agreement with the White House, which provides access to the agencies, the Trump transition can also avoid submitting an ethics pledge, whose requirements are outlined by the Presidential Transition Act."

Valerie Smith Boyd, director of the Center for Presidential Transition, also expressed security concerns about the turn of events, telling Politico, "We’ve already seen hacking attempts in this election cycle, and of course, the dot gov addresses also help federal agencies understand that yes, these individuals that you’re communicating with are official representatives of the candidate. If the candidate does not have dot gov email addresses, will federal agencies have to brief only in person? Would they have to offer, kind of, standalone computers that are not connected to a network? Would they have to provide, kind of, go back to paper binders full of material?”

You can read more here.

‘Wasn’t born smart’: Trump attacks Harris’ intelligence — as he gets basic facts wrong

Donald Trump is attacking Vice President Kamala Harris’s intelligence again, making false claims and getting some basic facts wrong while doing so.

Last week The New York Times reported Trump had called Vice President Harris “retarded.”

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Internet floored by ex-MAGA voter's skeptical reaction to Trump's J6 'day of love' remark

A participant in a town hall Wednesday night became a social media meme as his head bobbed in doubt when former President Donald Trump tried to downplay and explain away the Jan. 6 riot as a "day of love."

At the town hall on Univision Noticias, Ramiro González, a Tampa, Florida, construction worker, said he wanted to give the MAGA leader a chance to "win back" his vote.

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‘Take some deep breaths and calm down’: Fani Willis’ lawyer jabs ‘skunk’ GOP lawmaker

The attorney representing Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis is telling Jim Jordan to “calm down,” while reminding the Republican House Judiciary Chairman he ignored a lawfully issued subpoena from the U.S. House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack, and likening him to “a skunk telling a possum his breath stinks.”

Roy E. Barnes, the former and most recent Democratic governor of Georgia, is representing Willis. He is a recipient of The John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award, and his no-holds-barred response to a letter Chairman Jordan sent led MSNBC/NBC News legal contributor Katie Phang to call him her “new hero.”

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'His brain is gone': Trump's rambling answers at Fox town hall startle critics

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday did a town hall appearance on Fox News in which he rambled incoherently when asked what he would do to lower the price of bacon.

After Fox News' Harris Faulkner asked Trump about the price of the meat, Trump called the situation horrible — and then said that were he president, there would never have been a war in Ukraine.

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