Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Push Notification

'My Republican friends are laughing': Trump told that own party members mock his decisions

Republican lawmakers are laughing at President-elect Donald Trump and the "clown" he wants to see appointed the nation's top law enforcement officer, according to Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA).

Swalwell on Wednesday scoffed at Trump's chosen attorney general, former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), and his attempts to bury a potentially damning Ethics committee report on accusations he had sex with a minor.

Keep reading... Show less

GOP accused of power-grab with bill being pushed through weeks before Dems take over in NC

North Carolina Republican lawmakers have just a few weeks before a Democrat takes over the governor's mansion and the GOP loses its supermajority in the legislature — and they're being accused of trying to push through some last-minute changes that would weaken the incoming administration.

Taking to X on Wednesday, election law expert David Becker, who is the executive director of The Center for Election Innovation and Research, said the Republicans are "dropping some major structural and procedural changes to North Carolina elections in a 'hurricane relief' bill during the lame-duck session."

Keep reading... Show less

'It's shameful': James Comer slammed on House floor over bill suggesting 'racism is over'

Rep. Summer Lee (D-PA) called out white conservatives like Rep. James Comer (R-KY) after he pushed a bill that would modify the Civil Rights Act to outlaw diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in the federal government.

During a House Oversight Committee hearing on Wednesday, Comer encouraged members to support the Dismantle DEI Act.

Keep reading... Show less

‘Declaration of war on expertise’: Experts explain danger of Trump ‘MAGA zealot’ nominees

President-elect Donald Trump has surprised and even alarmed many across the country, and "puzzled" and "baffled" some within his own party, with his Cabinet and other top White House nominations. Critics on the left have denounced his picks for their apparent lack of experience or qualifications for the roles they are expected to take on, noting some hold controversial or even false positions in the fields they may soon direct policy on. Meanwhile, experts in the fields of government, fascism, and democracy, are raising serious concerns about the potential “danger” some nominees represent, drawing comparisons to the “professional propagandists” often found in authoritarian regimes.

Dr. Ruth Ben-Ghiat, an NYU professor of history and a recognized expert on fascism and authoritarianism, on Wednesday pointed to this report on one of Trump's most-recent nominations, Linda McMahon:

Keep reading... Show less

Senators seek FBI's evidence against Gaetz in sex trafficking probe

Senate Democrats asked for the evidence gathered on Matt Gaetz by an FBI investigation into his alleged sex crimes.

Ten of the 11 Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee sent a letter Wednesday to FBI director Christopher Wray requesting the agency's complete file on the sex trafficking investigation involving Gaetz, who Donald Trump has nominated to lead the Justice Department, reported NOTUS.

Keep reading... Show less

'Achilles’ heel': Analyst says MAGA voters expect Trump to end a crisis he can't

President-elect Donald Trump has a pressing problem that voters expect him to fix and his solutions will only exacerbate, a new political analysis contends.

Trump's popularity faces imminent peril in the form of a mounting housing crisis that his promised mass deportations, tax cuts and tariff demands will only worsen, Washington Post economics columnist Heather Long argued Wednesday.

Keep reading... Show less

'They dirty them up': Trump flips out as scrutiny of nominees ramps up

Moments after the House Ethics Committee began to meet behind closed doors to discuss what is reportedly a very damaging sex and drugs report about ex-Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), who Donald Trump has tabbed as his next attorney general, the president-elect jumped on his Truth Social platform to rage about his nominees being scrutinized.

With Gaetz the most imperiled and proposed Defense Department secretary Pete Hegseth also dealing with fallout over paying a woman off after she accused him of sexual assault seven years ago in California, Trump complained that his critics are trying to "dirty" up his more controversial cabinet selections.

ALSO READ: A giant middle finger from a tiny craven man

On Truth Social he wrote, "This is what the Radical Left Lunatics do to people. They dirty them up, they destroy them, and then they spit them out. They are trying that right now with some great American Patriots who are only trying to fix the mess that the Democrats have made of our Country."

"WE WILL WIN!!! MAGA," he added.

Susan Collins rejects Trump request to bypass confirmation hearings for nominees: report

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) indicated she would not go along with Donald Trump's demand to bypass confirmation hearings for his Cabinet nominees.

The Maine Republican called Wednesday for "extensive committee investigations" for the president-elect's health administration appointees and echoed concerns by other lawmakers that Trump would skip several steps in the vetting process by making recess appointments, reported Axios.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's lawyers 'show boldness' in demanding New York guilty verdict be thrown out

Donald Trump's lawyers submitted a filing on Wednesday demanding that the guilty verdict in the New York "hush money" trial be vacated because it would eventually be dismissed anyway.

Law 360's Frank G. Runyeon posted the argument, which claims that as a president-elect, Trump enjoys the same benefits as a sitting president. It means he is "completely immune from any criminal process," the filing says.

Keep reading... Show less

'We've planned that': Tuberville spills on plot to confirm Gaetz before Trump is sworn in

Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) revealed this week that Republican senators had developed a plan to confirm President-elect Donald Trump's nominations, including former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) as attorney general, before the new president is sworn in.

During a Wednesday interview on Real America's Voice, Tuberville vowed to overcome the objections of Democrats despite sexual misconduct allegations against Gaetz and Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth.

Keep reading... Show less

'They may have to even recuse themselves': Trump lawyers may be forced to stand down

Two of Donald Trump's personal lawyers who were rewarded with plum appointments in the Department of Justice may be sidelined from dealing with the ongoing hush money trial overseen by Judge Juan Merchan.

Speaking with host Ana Cabrera, MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin explained the ethical bind attorneys Todd Blanche, nominated to be Deputy Attorney General and Emil Bove, slated for Principal Associate Deputy AG, will find themselves in as they are poised to assume their new roles.

"Let's not forget Trump has tapped two of his defense attorneys in the hush money case, Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, for senior roles in the Justice Department in his incoming administration. If this case does drag out, what impact could that have?" the MSNBC host asked.

ALSO READ: A giant middle finger from a tiny craven man

"I think it causes a conflict of interest for Todd Blanche and Emil Bove because, if for example Ana, they can continue to brief the issue about whether this case should exist into a future Trump presidency, if Todd Blanche and Emil Bove are then in the Department of Justice, the department itself will have an interest in getting involved in the case on behalf of the executive office of the president."

"There are interests for the office of the president that are different than the interests that Trump as an individual has," she added. "And Emil Bove and Todd Blanche having represented the president in his personal capacity will have that conflict and may have to even recuse themselves from the department's involvement in this case in the future."

Watch below or at the link.

Keep reading... Show less

'Out here running toilet scams': Spectators dump on Trump's newest administration pick

President-elect Donald Trump's decision to select a former Rose Bowl tight end embroiled in a masculine toilet scandal to represent the nation abroad was received with the all the decorum such an announcement could expect.

"UPDATE: Trump picks Matthew Whitaker for NATO ambassador," the news outlet Tennessee Holler told readers Wednesday. "You may remember him as the acting attorney general who was on the board of a company that boasted toilets for 'well-endowed men.'"

Keep reading... Show less

Pete Hegseth defender: Defense officials allowing women in combat 'have to be gone'

Andrew Cherkasky, an anti-woke former federal prosecutor, defended former Fox News host Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for Defense secretary, by insisting that all department officials who support women in combat roles have to be fired.

During a Wednesday interview on Real America's Voice, War Room host Steve Bannon asked Cherkasky what he would advise Hegseth to do on day one of his tenure.

Keep reading... Show less