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'This is an unserious moment': Trump's bid for Black voters buried by Black conservatives

Donald Trump's continuing attempts to recruit Black voters are getting a thumbs down from some Black conservatives as being cursory. "trite" and larded with photo-ops that are not convincing anyone.

According to a new report from Politico, the former president's 2024 campaign is working on a dubious assumption that his legal problems make him more relatable to Black Americans and they are combining that with some staged appearances in the Black community.

As Politico's Brakkton Booker wrote, "Yet Trump’s attempts to reach out to Black voters can at times seem manufactured or clumsy," before noting the former president's appearance at a sneaker convention to promote a Trump athletic shoe that failed to make inroads outside of his MAGA base months ago.

ALSO READ: A neuroscientist reveals how Trump and Biden's cognitive impairments are different

Trump's latest ploy was a pre-planned stop at a Chick-fil-A restaurant in Atlanta where he was greeted by the fast food outlet's employees.

According to Booker, several Black conservatives in Georgia were unimpressed.

"Black conservative radio talk show host Sonnie Johnson called it a 'photo op' on social media," the report stated with Booker adding, "Felecia Killings, who runs a conservative think tank that specializes in Black outreach in Atlanta, derided it as trite."

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Trump on the verge of handing Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg a big 'win': former prosecutor

Former President Donald Trump has indicated that he will take the witness stand during his first criminal trial in Manhattan, and one former DOJ official said that the prosecution is likely hoping he won't change his mind about that.

When reporters asked Trump on Friday if he would testify under oath in his own defense, he responded, "yes." According to Newsweek, Joyce Vance — who was U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Alabama during President Barack Obama's administration — thinks Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is banking on being able to cross-examine the former president.

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Trump demands removal of Judge Merchan in meltdown before contempt hearing

Donald Trump kicked off his Saturday morning by going on an all-caps tirade aimed at Judge Juan Merchan as his attorneys prepare to defend him in a contempt hearing set for early next week over his other attacks on Truth Social.

On Monday, the former president's trial on 34 felony counts related to paying hush money to adult film star Stormy Daniels will proceed after a jury was sworn in on Friday.

ALSO READ: A criminologist explains why keeping Trump from the White House is all that matters

Now facing an actual criminal trial that could lead to four years in prison if he is found guilty, the ex-president is ramping up his attacks on the judge and appears to still be furious he is going to trial.

On Saturday morning, he wrote, "THIS SCAM 'RUSHED' TRIAL TAKING PLACE IN A 95% DEMOCRAT AREA IS A PLANNED AND COORDINATED WITCH HUNT THAT COULD HAVE BEEN BROUGHT 8 YEARS AGO, BUT EVERYBODY PASSED. INSTEAD THEY WAITED AND BROUGHT IT RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE OF MY PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE WORST AND MOST INCOMPETENT PRESIDENT EVER, CROOKED JOE BIDEN. IT IS BEING PRESIDED OVER BY POSSIBLY THE MOST CONFLICTED JUDGE IN JUDICIAL HISTORY, WHO MUST BE REMOVED FROM THIS HOAX IMMEDIATELY. I DID NOTHING WRONG!"

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'Grow up': Top House Republican rips far-right colleagues over 'lack of respect'

Rep. Tom Cole (R-Oklahoma) has been in the House of Representatives for more than 20 years. In a recent interview with Politico, he unleashed on newer members of the House Republican Conference over behavior he views as counterproductive.

Cole was particularly candid about his feelings for the House majority's far-right fringe. He lamented that a small handful of extremists among his conference has so far been able to oust a sitting House speaker and assert their will over the rest of the party despite not holding any leadership positions.

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'He's going to pop': Warning given about Trump's age and stress during hush money trial

During an MSNBC panel discussion about Donald Trump's upcoming hearing on contempt charges related to attacks made on jurors and witnesses in his hush money trial, a former prosecutor predicted the former president is headed for a major meltdown

Speaking with the hosts of "The Weekend," Charles Coleman Jr. suggested the trial that will commence next week in the Manhattan courtroom of Judge Juan Merchan will be long and intense and that Trump's age and ability to deal with the stress could be a major factor.

Asked what he predicts will happen in the coming week when opening statements will be presented and the first witnesses will be called, Coleman went in a different direction about how the trial is weighing on the embattled ex-president.

ALSO READ: A neuroscientist reveals how Trump and Biden's cognitive impairments are different

"Donald Trump is not used to being in spaces where there are narratives advancing about him that he cannot counteract and that is exactly why he has so much trouble with this gag order," he told the hosts.

"There are things being said about him and he feels as if his hands are tied: he cannot stand the feeling," he elaborated. "And I joked about it at the beginning of the last segment. The truth is that trial is a very long, arduous and exhausting process. For someone of his age, it is a lot of stress to deal with. That is why I fully expect, regardless of what happens with Judge Juan Merchan's recent ruling this week, he is going to pop."

"He is going to violate the gag order in grand fashion in front of the media and I think it will come sooner rather than later because it is not a position he is used to being in," he added before suggesting, "If I'm the prosecutor in this case, I'm going to sit back and let it happen."

Watch below or at the link.

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'Frustrated' Trump showing weakness as hush money trial demonstrates he's lost control

Donald Trump's inability to be out on the campaign trail due to his legal entanglements is not only hurting him in the polls, but also destroying the myth that he is the master of his own fate.

The former president has long maintained that he is always in total control and, according to Politico's Natalie Allison, both his demeanor and his complaints outside the Manhattan courthouse where he is facing 34 felony counts are indicative that he is at the mercy of things he cannot control — and he knows it.

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Trump has 'finally met his match' after Judge Merchan put him on a 'short leash': experts

Attempts by Donald Trump to derail and create chaos at his Manhattan hush money trial have been promptly shut down by Judge Juan Merchan who is earning praise from legal experts.

With jury selection wrapped up and opening arguments scheduled for Monday, the trial is progressing at a speed that was unexpected and credit is being given to Merchan who has brought the former president to heel by quickly admonishing him as demonstrated when he was warned about addressing prospective jurors.

In a column for MSNBC, legal experts Norm Eisen, Jacob Kovacs-Goodman and Francois Barrilleaux suggested Trump may have finally "met his match" in the no-nonsense jurist based upon the past week's proceedings.

ALSO READ: Revealed: What government officials privately shared about Trump not disclosing finances

"In Merchan’s courtroom, our country’s bedrock principle that no one is above the law is flourishing. In this first week of proceedings, the jury selection process proved resilient and, despite challenges, moved much faster than many thought," they wrote.

They went on to add, "It helped that the judge kept the former president on a tight leash when jurors were in the courtroom. While Trump may broadcast his tirades against the legal system and American elections to millions around the world on Truth Social (and faces a contempt hearing for possible gag order violations as a result), inside the courtroom he must follow the same rules as any other criminal defendant."

Judge Merchan was also praised for how quickly he pushed through the sticky issue of selecting jurors while also being cognizant of the defendant's right to a fair trial.

"By commencing this high-pressure proceeding in the usual manner and ensuring jurors are unbiased as well as unintimidated, Merchan is demonstrating that, in America, we aspire to equal justice for all," they wrote before adding, "The more-or-less nuts-and-bolts process we saw unfold this week paves the way for a prompt opening of the case and shows that accountability is coming for Donald Trump at last."

You can read more here.

'Huge loophole': Trump-appointed FEC officials paved way for RNC to pay his legal fees

The cash-strapped Republican National Committee (RNC) continues to trail its Democratic counterpart in campaign fundraising. But a new rule recently passed by GOP-friendly officials on the Federal Election Commission (FEC) may end up being a critical lifeline for Republicans this election cycle.

According to the Daily Beast, three Republican members of the FEC appointed during former President Donald Trump's administration recently passed an obscure ruling that effectively approved the expenditure of RNC funds on the ex-president's legal bills. The Beast's Roger Sollenberger and Mini Racker wrote that the rule allows for the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) — the GOP's campaign arm for U.S. Senate races — to divert funds from its legal/recount account toward any overt campaign ad buy, provided that money raised from those ads eventually went back into the legal account.

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Trump's trial testimony offer could hinge on Harvey Weinstein ruling: attorney

"Yeah, I would testify," Donald Trump said days before his criminal hush money case began. "That's not a trial, that's a scam."

Since then, prosecutors with the Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office are taking him at his word, filing a notice of Trump's past misconduct otherwise known as a "Sandoval notice".

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House Republicans increasingly sick of MTG’s performance politics

WASHINGTON — Embattled House Speaker Mike Johnson’s fate seems to rest in the answer to a seemingly petty, though deeply — if accidentally so — philosophical question: Where’s performance end and policymaking begin these days?

For Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and her allies on the far right of today’s far-right Republican Party — whether her congressional colleagues or someone livestreaming from their basement — Speaker Johnson lacks fight.

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'Shame on you': Franklin Graham torched online for siding with Trump in criminal case

Evangelist Franklin Graham was criticized by political experts and onlookers on Friday after he explicitly sided with Donald Trump in the former president's ongoing criminal trial in New York.

"Pray for former President [Trump]," he wrote on social media. "His enemies want to do everything they can to destroy him, to put him in jail, or to drag out this trial to prevent him from campaigning. I’m not telling you to vote for him—I’m asking you to pray for him."

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'Daunting': Ex-judge explains 'perilous' tactic Juan Merchan may use to manage Trump jury

It took four days to seat 12 jurors and six alternates to serve on the historic first criminal trial of a former U.S. president. But if New York Judge Juan Merchan decides it necessary to sequester them to protect them and also limit the exposure to the rabid interest on the hush money case — it could be a very involved process.

"The logistics of sequestering a jury... are really daunting and the expense is high and jurors don't like it, necessarily," retired federal judge John Jones III said during a panel discussion on CNN. "I agree that defense attorneys typically don't like it either."

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'Trump is lying': Analyst claims ex-president exhibited 'contempt' in press conference

On Thursday, former President Donald Trump approached a gaggle of reporters with a wad of news clippings and proceeded to thumb through them to suggest they prove he's being persecuted (not prosecuted) in his historic criminal hush money trial.

A body language and emotional intelligence expert noted the unspoken things Trump is expressing while going on a rambling speech about his purported unfair treatment.

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