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'Clearly dangerous' Army reservist remains ready to deploy despite white nationalism probe

A former North Carolina National Guard member remains in reserve status — part of a pool of soldiers on standby for deployment — more than 18 months after the Army initiated an investigation into his extremist activities, Raw Story has learned.

The Army Human Resources Command opened an investigation on Christopher Woodall in September 2023 after Raw Story confirmed that while serving in the National Guard, he organized a “white nationalist” paramilitary group that held at least one weekend training in rural North Carolina. The report also revealed that Woodall used a Telegram channel to recruit for the group while claiming his experience included “running a state for the KKK”, or Ku Klux Klan, and demonstrating with the National Socialist Movement, a neo-Nazi group.

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Republicans might 'exert collective power' on Trump under one condition: GOP strategist

One political expert said that the more anger seen at town halls and from voters, the more pressure is placed on U.S. House and Senate members. She further suggests this might force Republicans to use their power on President Donald Trump.

Lindsey Drath, a former regional finance director for Sen. Mitt Romney's (R-UT) campaign, told MSNBC host José Díaz-Balart that the kind of town halls lawmakers are facing back home could ultimately have an impact.

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'Promoted our tormenter': MAGA fans vent disgust at Trump official's latest move

Some of President Trump’s most ardent MAGA fans are questioning FBI Director Kash Patel’s decision to elevate an agency veteran who played a key role in coordinating the sprawling Jan. 6 investigation to lead the Washington Field Office.

Steven J. Jensen previously served as chief of the FBI’s Domestic Terrorism Operations Section, and was recently named by Patel as assistant director in charge of the office, according to a report by the New York Times.

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'Significant': Trump scores first Supreme Court win of second term

CNN chief legal affairs correspondent Paula Reid reported Friday afternoon that President Donald Trump was handed his first "win" by the U.S. Supreme Court, and it "is significant."

According to the High Court ruling, Trump can block $65 million in Department of Education grants that were earmarked to help states with teacher shortages.

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'Terrorist' tattoos cited by Homeland Security 'stolen from the internet': legal expert

Lawyer Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, senior fellow at the Immigration Council, did a reverse image search of photos of tattoos the Department of Homeland Security claims represent the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua.

Over the weekend, the ACLU obtained ICE's "Alien Enemies Act Validation Guide," which the union said "confirms all it takes to be sent to rot in prison in El Salvador is 1) having a tattoo an ICE officer says is a 'gang tattoo' and 2) displaying 'logos,' 'symbols,' or clothes an ICE officer says are gang signs," said Reichlin-Melnick.

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'I was shocked': Trump's mass freeze strands American students abroad

President Donald Trump's broad spending freeze included the State Department's scholarship program for students studying abroad — and students say they were left holding the bag overseas.

Many students who couldn't otherwise afford it can apply for scholarships, such as the Fulbright scholarship, which funds such opportunities.

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'Didn't work out exactly great': Trump speaks out after spat with Zelensky

President Donald Trump returned to the cameras Friday evening to complain further about the Oval Office meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, telling reporters the gathering "didn't work out exactly great from his standpoint."

Zelensky was in Washington to sign a deal giving the U.S. access to rare earth minerals necessary for various technologies. But Trump lashed out at Zelensky as the two debated facts. Trump ultimately devolved into a rant against Sen. Adam Schiff (R-CA) and the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

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Judges may be days away from jailing people in showdown with Trump administration: analyst

One political analyst thinks judges are close to jailing people for contempt in the ongoing court battles over government funding cuts.

U.S. District Court Judge Amir H. Ali ruled on Wednesday that he would not pause his order giving President Donald Trump's administration an 11:59 p.m. deadline that same day to pay invoices for foreign development funds for contracts completed before Feb. 13, Just Security and MSNBC legal analyst Adam Klasfeld said on Bluesky.

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'Offensive': Senator issues searing takedown of GOP myth in confirmation hearing

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) stepped in to dispel one of many myths repeated during Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s confirmation hearing on Wednesday.

Toward the end of the hearing, Whitehouse said that there had been several comments about what some call "late-term abortion."

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Christian leaders making good on 'threat legal scholars have been warning about': reporter

Although President Donald Trump tried to soften his party's image on abortion rights during the 2024 presidential campaign, many of his hardcore evangelical supporters are pushing his administration to take drastic action to curb access to abortion medications.

Mother Jones reporter Julianne McShane flags a letter sent this week from major anti-abortion activists to the Department of Justice requesting the enforcement of the Comstock Act to prevent the distribution of the drug mifepristone.

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'Shove it': Canadians revolt after Trump says they'd have better health care as 51st state

President Donald Trump once again made a pitch to Canadian voters to join America as its "51st state" -- and was met with immediate backlash by Canadian citizens.

During his trip to North Carolina, Trump once again mused about incorporating Canada into America and even promised they'd have "much better health care coverage" if they joined.

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Trump makes bizarre 'hit with a baseball bat' comment about Democratic senator

President Donald Trump made an odd remark about Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) looking as if he'd been beaten with a baseball bat.

The president spoke to reporters Friday morning in Fletcher, North Carolina, where he was touring areas devastated by Hurricane Helene last fall, and he floated the idea of eliminating the Federal Emergency Management Agency through executive order, making Canada the 51st state and wondering whether Schiff – one of his most prominent enemies – had been victimized by violence.

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Assassination target says Trump 'knew exactly what he was doing' by ending security detail

Former Trump official John Bolton isn't buying the explanation from president Donald Trump for the decision to end Secret Service protection for him and other former administration officials who have become critics.

Trump halted security details for his former national security adviser, along with former secretary of state Mike Pompeo and his aide Brian Hook, who have all been targeted by alleged assassination plots by by Iranian nationals, but the newly inaugurated president said they were no longer entitled to costly Secret Service details.

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