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'So clueless': Indicted Trump ally lashes out over conservative magazine's new suggestion

A former top Justice Department official indicted in the Georgia election scheme defended Donald Trump against the need for a pardon.

Jeffrey Clark, who has pleaded not guilty to violating the state’s racketeering law and attempting to make false statements, pushed back Friday morning against a column by the National Review's executive editor Mark Antonio Wright, who argued that president Joe Biden should pardon the president-elect for the crimes he allegedly committed.

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'Not entirely far-fetched': D.C. residents face prospect of Trump taking over local police

Donald Trump's return to the Oval Office, combined with his purported plans to gut the government, has the potential to disrupt the lives of D.C. residents who already live under a system that limits their rights of self-determination, according to a new report.

According to a report from Politico's Michael Schaffer, locals have long lived under a system where Congress and the president have the ability to overrule local government unlike other cities, and with a vengeful Trump returning, local citizens are looking at major disruptions to their way of life.

Among those changes is the prospect of an authoritarian-minded Trump using the local police to get his way as he tests the limits of his re-acquired power.

ALSO READ: Ecstatic J6 offenders look forward to pardons from 'Daddy Trump' — and retribution

According to the report, it is "not entirely farfetched" that Trump, a convicted felon in New York, will use his appointed U.S. attorney, who serves as local district attorney, to go after his enemies in D.C. of which there are many.

"Federal law also gives the president the right to temporarily take over the local police — something previous chief executives never played with," the report notes.

Schaffer adds, "...the people who work the gears of politics — the Hill staffer who needs an abortion; the political reporter with a child in D.C. public schools; the lobbyist hoping to sell her house at a profit — may soon find themselves buffeted by election results in ways that feel entirely new."

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'Zero chance': Ex-ICE leader says Trump can't get 'anywhere close to where he wants to go'

An immigration law expert warned that Donald Trump cannot carry out his sweeping plans to deport millions of people without breaking the law.

The president-elect has pledged to strengthen border security and carry out mass deportations, which would present massive logistical and financial challenges, and John Sandweg, former acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement under Barack Obama, said the campaign promise would also pose legal obstacles.

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Harris ally says there's a 'feeling of betrayal’ toward white women after exit polls

A Democratic ally of both President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris said Thursday that there is a “feeling of betrayal” toward white women – the majority of whom voted for President-elect Donald Trump – who she bluntly stated, “is a sexist” and “white nationalist.”

“Racism and sexism seem to be the reason,” said Melanie L. Campbell, who chairs the minority advocacy group Power of the Ballot Action Fund and also served on a committee of women who advised Biden in selecting Harris as his running mate. “White women, who were very much a part, we thought this time, would actually join forces with all women and vote for the first woman president, the first Black and South Asian woman president.”

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'Someone's got to run the deportation camps': Prison stocks soar as Trump agenda unfolds

Several private prison stocks have been skyrocketing since Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election. Trump has vowed mass deportations, and his campaign spokesperson on Wednesday said "millions" would be deported on day one.

"One HUGE winner from Trump's win: Private prison companies GEO Group Inc. and CoreCivic Inc.," observed Bloomberg News reporter Steven Dennis on Wednesday. "Their stocks, which could benefit from Trump's plans for rounding up millions of immigrants, rocketed higher today 41% and 29% respectively."

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Unions say building worker power is only way to defeat Trump's fascist right

The largest labor unions in the United States are ready for a fight.

That much was made clear within hours of Donald Trump's victory over Vice President Kamala Harris in Tuesday's election, an outcome that will soon bring to power a former president who aggressively pursued anti-worker policies during his first four years in the White House despite posturing as an ally of rank-and-file union members.

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Dem senator lashes out at Green Party constituents after colleague booted in tight race

Pennsylvania Democratic Sen. John Fetterman took to X on Thursday evening to lash out at thousands of his own constituents who voted for the Green Party candidate in the state's tight Senate race.

The race between incumbent Sen. Bob Casey (D-PA) and Republican challenger Dave McCormick was called Thursday in favor of McCormick, though Casey has said he will wait to concede until every vote is counted. McCormick was leading by about 34,000 votes.

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'I can read a chart —  I guess you can't': Heated debate on CNN as panelist shouts 'BS!'

A stand-up comedian clashed with a Republican strategist Thursday night in a heated debate on CNN over the Biden administration's handling of Abbey Gate in Afghanistan.

Comedian Pete Dominick blasted a clip of Rep. Seth Moulton (D-MA), a veteran, saying the Biden administration was "out of touch with America."

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Harris’ refusal to throw Biden ‘under the bus’ fueled brutal election loss: Columnist

Kamala Harris squandered the many chances she had on the campaign trail to distance herself from the unpopular incumbent president who she replaced on the Democratic ticket, and that calculation likely contributed to her bruising election night loss, a Washington Post columnist said Thursday.

“I think we will be litigating this and relitigating this for many years to come,” Washington Post columnist Catherine Rampell told CNN’s Abby Phillip Thursday during an appearance on “NewsNight.”

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Ex-FBI official troubled by ‘enormous’ 'implications' of Trump’s next attorney general

Former FBI Acting Director Andrew McCabe called the implications of the actions President-elect Donald Trump’s next attorney general takes while in office – and whether they make it known they will carry out the president’s bidding – “enormous.”

Speaking to CNN’s Anderson Cooper Thursday night, McCabe, who Trump famously fired hours before he was scheduled to retire in 2018, told the host that he believes the rule of law will look “very different” under Trump’s second term.

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Ex-Labor Secretary sounds off: Trump's 'Tax Scam 2.0' is in the works

Former Clinton administration Labor Secretary Robert Reich fired off a warning on X Thursday about former President Donald Trump's new plans for tax changes, which will reportedly move forward if Republicans secure a majority in the House.

These plans, he warned, will be a redux of the first Trump administration's massive tax cuts for billionaires and corporations, the vast majority of which went to top-income earners and failed to deliver on promises of new job growth.

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'No one fell harder': Professor says Dems ignored key bloc in favor of 'special interests'

A marketing professor at New York University who predicted the election would be a referendum on each party's "aspirational vision of masculinity" took a victory lap on CNN on Thursday night and said people like Elon Musk are the epitome of such.

Scott Galloway told anchor Anderson Cooper that Musk sends satellites to space, builds cars, and is "magnificently wealthy," "provocative" and "entertaining."

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‘Not serious’: Trump reportedly dismissed Rick Scott’s bid for Senate leadership role

Florida Sen. Rick Scott’s hopes of becoming the Senate’s next Republican leader were privately pushed aside by former President Donald Trump, who according to new reporting, told allies his bid was “not serious.”

Scott is seen as a likely replacement for outgoing Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell’s position, along with Sens. John Thune (R-SD) and John Cornyn (R-TX), who are also jockeying for the role.

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