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Jack Smith could stop Trump's immunity case cold with one argument to SCOTUS: legal expert

Special counsel Jack Smith needs to make one particular, simple argument at Thursday's Supreme Court hearing to make former President Donald Trump's claim of immunity from prosecution come crashing down, explained former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance on her "Civil Discourse" blog.

This comes as the Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments in Trump's immunity appeal on Thursday, after having lost his claims in every lower court where the matter was raised. The fate of Trump's federal election conspiracy trial could hinge not just on what the justices decide, but how quickly they decide it, potentially consigning the case to be held after the election.

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'Jesus was busy': Comer mocked for hope divine intervention will kill impeachment probe

House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-KY) is being subjected to Seventh Circle of Hell-level burns after news broke he hopes divine intervention will get him out of the President Biden impeachment probe.

CNN Capitol Hill reporter Melanie Zanona kicked the mockery off Wednesday when she shared on X a comment from an anonymous Republican lawmaker who said, "Comer is hoping Jesus comes so he can get out."

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'Really weak Donald': Experts say Trump campaign slammed with warning signs in PA primary

Donald Trump's decision not to try and woo supporters of former Gov. Nikki Haley (R-SC) is coming back to bite him, experts said citing the results of Tuesday night's Pennsylvania's primary.

With independent voters reportedly out of reach, the former president will have to rely on his MAGA base and mainstream Republicans to beat President Joe Biden. Votes for Haley in Pennsylvania, despite her ending her campaign over a month and a half ago, illustrate a serious problem for the Trump campaign.

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'Fed up': Republicans say Comer is desperate to dump Biden impeachment probe

The Republican Party's beleaguered effort to impeach President Joe Biden for corruption it has yet to prove has House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer wishing for a biblical snow day, according to GOP sources in a new report.

"Comer is hoping Jesus comes so he can get out,” a GOP lawmaker told CNN Wednesday. “He is fed up.”

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'His colorful personality turned gray': MSNBC's Mika sees 'subdued' Trump draining away

MSNBC's Mika Brzezinski noticed her former friend Donald Trump seems to be wearing down already under the stress of his criminal trial.

The quadruple-indicted former president has been ordered by New York Judge Juan Merchan to attend every day of hearings, and the "Morning Joe" co-host said Trump doesn't seem like himself slumping in and out of the courtroom and dozing off occasionally during the proceedings.

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Trump can't accept MAGA isn't willing to fight for him this time: analyst

Former President Donald Trump expected huge crowds of supporters to show up in protest as he stood trial in Manhattan this week — and now he's desperate to come up with any explanation for their absence that avoids the harsh truth, wrote Amanda Marcotte for Salon.

This comes as the former president lashes out at New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman for reporting that he is disappointed with the lack of protests outside his trial, and insists that no one is there because police have cordoned off the streets around the Manhattan courthouse — a claim which has been debunked.

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'Why so quiet?' MSNBC's Mika suggests Trump's silence means witness has dirt on him

Donald Trump's silence on former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker, who is appearing as a witness for the prosecution in the hush money trial playing out in a Manhattan courtroom, raised eyebrows Wednesday morning on MSNBC.

With the former president still lashing out before the press and on his Truth Social platform at his former attorney Michael Cohen, who has yet to take the stand, one "Morning Joe" analyst suggested the former scandal sheet publisher has unreleased dirt on Trump that has the former president quaking in his boots.

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‘We’re exploding’: MAGA's mastermind claims 'infinite patience' paying off

The MAGA movement has spent the past four years getting a “civics lesson,” and it’s now maneuvered into a position where it can put what it’s learned into practice, according to its mastermind.

Steve Bannon told writer Isaac Arnsdorf that the right-wing movement has spent its formative years learning the “rules” of government and stacking the low-level building blocks of government with its loyalists.

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Ex-prosecutor knocks down Trump's strongest defense after watching 2 days of testimony

Jurors have already heard two days of damning testimony against Donald Trump in his hush money trial, and a former prosecutor told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" she believes what had been considered his strongest defense could be knocked down.

Former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker told the jury that he personally tracked down negative stories about Trump during the 2016 election campaign and paid off damaging sources to prevent them from speaking to other outlets. Politico's deputy managing editor for politics Sam Stein floated what he believed to be the greatest weakness in the case against the ex-president.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene is in a downward spiral as 'her own team' abandons her: columnist

With her biggest booster abandoning her after she flipped out as Congress passed a massive $95 billion foreign aid package despite her threats, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) appears to have overplayed her hand — and set in motion the end of her reign of terror in the House.

That is the opinion of the New York Times' Michelle Cottle in a column in which she claimed Greene just had the worst week of her political career, culminating in Donald Trump siding with House Speaker Michael Johnson on the bill and subsequently leaving her "flapping and flailing."

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Texas GOPer openly blasts fellow Republicans as 'scumbags' and klansmen

WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio, ripped into his party’s right flank for voting against billions in foreign aid for U.S. allies last week, castigating his ultraconservative peers as “scumbags” and klansmen.

“These people used to walk around with white hoods at night. Now they're walking around with white hoods in the daytime,” Gonzales told CNN’s Dana Bash in an interview Sunday. “It didn't surprise me that some of these folks voted against aid to Israel.”

Gonazales, a rare flame-throwing centrist who is battling it out against YouTube gun enthusiast Brandon Herrera in the first serious primary challenge, singled out two sitting Republicans by name who have endorsed against him.

“It's my absolute honor to be in Congress, but I serve with some real scumbags like [Florida Congressman] Matt Gaetz. He paid minors to have sex with them at drunk parties,” Gonzales said, before calling out Rep. Bob Good for earlier this month endorsing Herrera, whom he called a “known neo-Nazi.”

Federal prosecutors declined to charge Gaetz after investigating allegations of sex trafficking, though the House Ethics Committee is continuing to investigate the matter.

Gonzales made the remarks in reaction to several Republican members voting against their party’s leadership on Saturday on military and civilian aid packages for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan. The hardline House Freedom Caucus asserted Congress should not pass the bills, which would include over $90 billion in assistance to the U.S. allies, before more securing aggressive measures on the U.S.-Mexico border. The foreign aid packages passed the House with large bipartisan support.

Gonzales has a history of clashing with the right wing of the House Republican conference. He criticized hardline border proposals by U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin, as anti-American and un-Christian and was the only Republican to vote against a set of rules for the House negotiated between former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and hardline Republicans. Roy’s border bill eventually became a foundation for sweeping border security legislation the House passed with full Republican support last year.

Gonzales’ attack on Good, who is the chair of the House Freedom Caucus, attracted swift rebuttal from the group’s members. U.S. Rep. Eli Crane, R-Arizona, said on social media it was “pathetic” to “insinuate that other members are klansmen.” Crane endorsed Herrera’s run in the same post.

"It is not surprising that one of the most liberal RINOs in Congress, who has egregiously fought against real border security, and votes like a Democrat, would also resort to the Democrat playbook in screaming ‘racism’ against those exposing him,” Good said in a statement. “Thankfully, the good people of the Texas 23rd District have the opportunity to vote for change and an America First patriot, in Brandon Herrera."

Herrera said Gonzales’ comments were an act of desperation as he gains momentum.

“This is the death spiral ladies and gentlemen,” Herrera said on social media.

Gaetz denied Gonzales’ claims about him as “lies,” saying on social media that “one of the final phases a politician goes through prior to defeat.”

Gaetz supported Herrera before the primary election, appearing at a campaign rally with him in San Antonio in March.

Roy, who also represents parts of San Antonio and has previously kept any personal animus out of the public eye, railed against Gonzales in a Tuesday radio interview in San Antonio.

"I'm being attacked. Conservatives are being attacked," Roy said on KTSA. "Bob Good, the chairman of the Freedom Caucus, is being attacked by Tony. He said that he's a Klansman. Yeah, I cannot tolerate what's happening to the people that I think are standing up for this country."

The Texas Republican Party censured Gonzales last year, citing his opposition to Roy’s border bill and the rules package, as well as his support for gun safety legislation after the Robb Elementary shooting in his district. The party also cited his support for legislation protecting same-sex marriage.

The censure invited a lively, five-way primary field, including Herrera and Julie Clark, the former Medina County GOP chair who started the censure motion. Backed by an army of online fans donating small-dollar donations, Herrera was able to secure a place against Gonzales in the runoff, which will be on May 28.

Attacking a fellow Republican member, including endorsing a primary challenger, was historically rare in the party. Gaetz’s support for Herrera was a provocative move, but the censure motion from the Texas GOP gave some cover for other Republicans to endorse Gonzales’ challengers.

Herrera has disquieted many of his fellow Republicans for his edgy humor on his YouTube channel and podcast appearances. He has made quips about veteran suicide, the Holocaust and child abuse that many moderate Republicans viewed as flippant.

He has defended his comments as being in jest to lighten heavy topics. He says in one video he’s “not really a big fan of fascism.”

Despite the pile ons from the right, Gonzales remains a competitive candidate with a formidable fundraising operation. He raised more than twice as much as Herrera in the first quarter of the year and maintains strong relationships with Republican leadership, corporate interests, moderate Republican donors and bipartisan interest groups. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee, which supports members of both parties to advance Israel-related issues, has steadily supported Gonzales.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, also backs Gonzales. He traveled to San Antonio on Tuesday to fundraise for him.

Roy criticized Johnson for passing the foreign aid bills without securing more for the border — a move Roy viewed as a betrayal. He said the speaker campaigning for Gonzales rubbed salt into the wound.

"To have the speaker be in San Antonio, campaigning for Tony … when we had them both voting to fund this atrocity this last weekend. I'm just beside myself that that's where things are," Roy said on KTSA.

Gonzales has also shown a willingness to entertain more partisan priorities, including the impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. Gonzales helped U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Georgia, garner support for her move to impeach the secretary. The Democrat-controlled Senate voted to dismiss the impeachment.

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'Seismic win for workers': FTC bans noncompete clauses

U.S. workers' rights advocates and groups celebrated on Tuesday after the Federal Trade Commission voted 3-2 along party lines to approve a ban on most noncompete clauses, which Democratic FTC Chair Lina Khansaid "keep wages low, suppress new ideas, and rob the American economy of dynamism."

"The FTC's final rule to ban noncompetes will ensure Americans have the freedom to pursue a new job, start a new business, or bring a new idea to market," Khan added, pointing to the commission's estimates that the policy could mean another $524 for the average worker, over 8,500 new startups, and 17,000 to 29,000 more patents each year.

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‘Blood on your hands’: Tennessee Republicans OK arming teachers after school shooting

Republicans in the Tennessee House passed legislation Tuesday afternoon allowing teachers to carry concealed weapons in classrooms across the state, thirteen months after a 28-year old shooter slaughtered three children and three adults at a Christian elementary school in Nashville.

The measure is reportedly not popular statewide, with Democrats, teachers, and parents from the school, Covenant Elementary, largely opposed. The Republican Speaker of the House, Cameron Sexton, at one point literally shut down debate on the bill by shutting off a Democratic lawmaker's microphone and then smiling.

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