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Jack Smith must now make 'strategic choice' on Trump case with 'major consequences'

During Thursday's oral arguments concerning former President Donald Trump's claim of total criminal immunity, the conservative majority on the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) indicated warmth toward Trump's position. One columnist recently wrote that if Department of Justice special counsel Jack Smith hopes to try the former president before the election, he may have to put some elements of his indictment on the chopping block.

In a Saturday column for Bloomberg, Harvard University law professor Noah Feldman wrote that SCOTUS may very well hand Trump a victory in one of two ways: Either they kick certain legal questions back to the lower courts and effectively ensure further delays that will push the trial back to the election, or a majority of justices could rule that Trump is indeed immune from criminal prosecution for acts committed as president — effectively scuttling Smith's four-count indictment.

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Trump's legal team just accidentally 'undercut' his previous claims in documents case

Donald Trump's legal team has been working overtime to force Special Counsel Jack Smith to make public his prosecution team's evidence against the former president in the criminal documents case, and they just had a victory... sort of.

Recently, Judge Aileen Cannon unsealed several documents in the Florida criminal case, resulting in a trove of new revelations. One of those newly disclosed details was that Walt Nauta, Trump's valet and co-defendant in the case, previously told a grand jury that his boss would throw papers "on the floor" when he "would leave for the evening."

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Nixon lawyer explains what's keeping him 'on the edge of his seat' in hush money case

The general public already knows a lot about the prosecution's case against Donald Trump in the criminal hush money cover-up case, but there's one detail that is keeping former Richard Nixon White House counsel John Dean "on the edge of his seat."

Dean, who recently highlighted a case that he said proves Trump has "no criminal immunity" when it comes to his actions as president, appeared on CNN Newsroom Live on Saturday and was asked about the case involving allegedly falsified records and an adult film star.

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'He looks terrible': Ex-Trump aide warns ex-president his next six months will be worse

Donald Trump may be looking bad right now, but the next six months are going to be even worse for him, according to a former official in the ex-president's administration.

Former White House communications chief Anthony Scaramucci appeared on MSNBC's Alex Witt Reports on Saturday, where he was asked about how he thinks Trump is handling the grueling schedule that accompanies his criminal trial and presidential campaign. He has previously warned Trump about a financial "avalanche" that is going to hit him.

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Insiders say trial is 'jarring' for Trump because he likes control of how steak is cooked

Donald Trump is thrown off by the criminal trial he's facing in more ways than one, but it all boils down to control, according to a report citing those close to the matter.

Trump is being forced most days to attend his trial, which features allegations that he committed bookkeeping fraud in connection with covering up a hush-money payment aimed at affecting the 2016 election. Trump has repeatedly claimed in public that the courtroom is kept uncomfortably cold.

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Trump's 'moods' are straining his staff's ability to get him to campaign: report

A combination of anger, incredulity and boredom at having to appear in a Manhattan courtroom four days a week is creating havoc for Donald Trump's closest aides who are finding it difficult to get him to campaign or meet with wealthy campaign donors.

According to a deep dive from the Washington Post, the former president is having a hard time coping with all of the restrictions visited upon him as he attends the hush money trial where he is facing 34 felony counts — one of which could land him in prison if a jury finds him guilty.

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Questions raised about Trump attorney Blanche taking a 'backseat' as trial progessed

Following the second week of Donald Trump's hush money trial in a Manhattan courtroom, MSNBC host Katie Phang noted that Donald Trump's primary lawyer, Todd Blanche, in the hush money trial seems to have withdrawn from scrutiny as the trial has progressed from jury selection to cross-examining the prosecution's witnesses.

Phang, a former prosecutor herself, pressed the Guardian's Hugo Lowell, who has been present in the courtroom to explain what is going on with the former president's defense strategy.

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'There you have it': Ex-prosecutor singles out pivotal confession in Trump trial

According to former prosecutor and current MSNBC host Katie Phang, a confession by former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker under oath in Donald Trump's hush money trial made the case for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office to prosecute the former president.

Opening her show on Saturday, Phang noted that a central part of the 34 felony count prosecution has hinged on whether the payments were being made and stories being buried, were in the best interest of the tabloid or Trump's bid to help his 2016 presidential campaign.

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Dark shift in Trump’s tone is 'how fascists campaign': expert

Former President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign speeches have been largely focused on highlighting differences between his MAGA movement and his political opponents, whom he accuses of destroying the country and harboring values antithetical to American ideals. One political expert recently told the New York Times that this is a key example of the ex-president's embrace of fascism as a political strategy.

In a lengthy Saturday article in the New York Times magazine, author Charles Homans explored how the 45th president of the United States' campaign rallies have lately taken on a much darker, more ominous tone. He noted that Trump has vowed to be an agent of "retribution," likening his opponents to "vermin" who will "do anything, whether legally or illegally, to destroy America and to destroy the American dream."

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'Pardon our appearance': Photos show Trump Tower mostly empty and in disrepair

A recent visit to Trump Tower where former president Donald Trump has set up camp while attending his 34 felony count trial in a nearby Manhattan courtroom revealed empty public spaces, lagging construction and a massive waterfall the Trump Organization is proud of turned off and silent.

In a collection of startling photos taken by the Daily Beast's Nell Scovell, accompanied by some of her wry commentary, at least the first two stories of the so-called Trump "crown jewel" appear mostly empty with shuttered retail shops undergoing construction, a currency exchange booth looking abandoned and a Trump Tower gift shop cluttered with "Trump 2020" campaign posters.

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The Biden impeachment is over despite 'the best efforts of the House GOP’s worst people'

Based upon the fact that the Fox News daily drumbeat about President Joe Biden's impeachment being right around the corner has gone noticeably silent, House Republicans have seemingly admitted defeat.

That is the opinion of political columnist Paul Waldman who wrote for MSNBC that the search party for Biden's criminal acts came up empty-handed and the GOP leaders of the House committees are privately telling their colleagues they are giving up.

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Floridians mourn both Bob Graham and a kinder era in state politics

Florida bade farewell Friday to Bob Graham during a public memorial at Florida’s Old Capitol, with hundreds of people filing up to the second-floor rotunda where Graham lay in state and sharing memories with his family and friends.

Among the mourners was Graham’s wife, Adele, his daughters, Gwen (a former congresswoman), Cissy, Suzanne, and Kendall, and their families. A military honor guard conveyed the casket to its bier and stood watch throughout the event.

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'He's miserable': Trump struggling to cope with the 'small indignities' of being on trial

Donald Trump's forced appearance in court for his hush money trial is subjecting him to something he is not accustomed to having to deal with and it is getting to him, reports The Wall Street Journal.

After two weeks of having to sit in the Manhattan courtroom where he is facing 34 felony counts related to paying hush money to adult film star Stormy Daniels, the Journal's Corrine Ramey wrote that the restrictions on his movements in the courthouse, being unable to speak when he wants to and even what he is allowed to drink while in the courtroom, are making him increasingly gloomy.

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