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Senator hammers Blanche​ over exposed Epstein victim names — and doesn't let him respond

Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) called out Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche during a heated hearing on Tuesday — forcing him to address Jeffrey Epstein survivors whose identities were revealed.

Blanche was testifying before the Senate Appropriations committee on Capitol Hill when Murray pushed him to apologize to survivors of Jeffrey Epstein and the Department of Justice's release of unredacted victim names in the Epstein files. The two got in a fiery back-and-forth over her questions.

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Senator blows up on Todd Blanche for 'inappropriate' pot shot in hearing

What started out as a very non-contentious questioning by Sen. Jeffrey Merkley (D-OR) of Todd Blanche ended in acrimony after the acting attorney general took a shot at President Joe Biden as the five-minute questioning period concluded.

Earlier, as Merkley addressed Blanche as part of the Senate Appropriations Committee, the Democrat offered to get the DOJ increased funding, long before the questioning took an ugly turn that led the Oregon Democrat to upbraid the witness.

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'Ginormous blowout' within reach for Democrats if polling trends holds firm: data expert

CNN's Harry Enten analyzed the range of outcomes likely in November's midterm elections, and he found that massive gain were within reach for the Democratic Party.

The political landscape was convulsed by the mid-decade redistricting war kicked off by President Donald Trump in Texas, and last month's Supreme Court ruling on Louisiana's congressional map set off another mad dash of partisan gerrymandering, so Enten tried to determine the possible outcomes based on this new reality.

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More than two dozen states sue Trump admin over 'unlawful' new rule

The Trump administration was hit with a major lawsuit Tuesday filed by a coalition of 25 Democratic-led states over a new rule the plaintiffs alleged to be “unlawful,” The Washington Post reported.

Published on May 1 and set to go into effect on July 1, the new rule narrows the definition of what constitutes a professional degree, and thereby, imposes new limits on loans that graduate students are eligible for. A number of graduate degrees often sought by health care workers would become ineligible for higher loans under the new rule, and as such, could exacerbate the ongoing health care worker shortage, the plaintiffs argue.

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Trump wanders out of White House to give free-wheeling rant in front ballroom construction

President Donald Trump stepped outside the White House on Tuesday to survey the sprawling construction site where his prized ballroom is rising from the rubble of the demolished East Wing — and delivered a lengthy, freewheeling tour that touched on drone warfare, Greek architecture, and his place in history.

"This is my gift to the United States of America," Trump told reporters as he gestured at the concrete skeleton taking shape on the White House grounds. "I'm going to be able to use it very little. When it's finished, we're talking about six or seven months. But it will be used for hopefully hundreds of years by other presidents."

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Trump says he was 'an hour away' from major new military strike before allies intervened

President Donald Trump told reporters on Tuesday that he was "an hour away" from striking Iran when Middle East allies asked him to stop.

Trump was speaking to press at the White House ballroom construction site when he started taking questions. He was asked about the reversed decision on Monday to stop a strike in Iran after several countries, including Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates that said they needed more time while "serious negotiations are now taking place."

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Todd Blanche forced to admit violent MAGA rioters could get federal payouts

During his testimony Tuesday before a Senate Appropriations subcommittee, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche made the startling admission that Jan. 6 Capitol rioters who had been convicted of assaulting police officers could be eligible for “multi-million dollar payouts” using taxpayer dollars.

The potential payouts would come from the new $1.776 billion fund setup in exchange for President Donald Trump dropping his $10 billion lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service, a lawsuit he filed in response to his tax returns being leaked in 2019. The fund will be dedicated to “settle claims brought by anyone who alleges they were harmed by the Biden administration’s ‘weaponization’ of the legal system,” per ABC News.

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'Don't ever do that again!' Todd Blanche hearing goes off the rails over J6 'slush fund'

Attorney General Todd Blanche got an earful from Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) on Tuesday after a Senate Appropriations hearing devolved into a heated confrontation over the Justice Department's controversial anti-weaponization fund — and whether a pardoned child molester could collect from it.

The fireworks started when Van Hollen pressed Blanche on a deeply troubling case: a Trump pardon recipient who allegedly molested two children after receiving clemency and then tried to buy their silence by promising them money he expected to receive from the DOJ fund.

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One swing state could be the firewall against what the Supreme Court just did

In late April, the U.S. Supreme Court once again weakened the protections communities of color rely on to secure fair political representation.

By making it harder to bring voter discrimination claims against electoral maps under the false premise of “vast social change,” the Court ignores the history and persistent realities of racial inequality in this country. It also opens the door to challenges against districts represented by leaders of color, potentially diluting the representation of Black and brown communities in Congress in favor of white power structures.

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New evidence shows Trump family 'corruptly benefiting' from presidency: report

President Donald Trump disclosed last week that he binged on corporate stocks earlier this year, when he and his administration were promoting or conducting business with some of those companies, and a new report suggests the president knew the details of the trades.

The 79-year-old president personally signed a 112-page federal financial disclosure document May 8 disclosing that he executed more than 3,500 individual stock trades between January and March, and his signature certified that he has full knowledge of his stock holdings, reported NOTUS.

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Prosecutors put Trump 'on notice' over election threat: 'We will prosecute'

A national coalition of prosecutors put President Donald Trump “on notice” Tuesday morning that if he dispatches federal immigration officials to polling places during the midterm elections – as he’s refused to rule out doing – those officials would be criminally investigated, charged and jailed.

“The right to vote without fear of armed government agents at the polls is not negotiable, and it is not subject to the whims of a president," said Mary Moriarty, a Minnesota-based county attorney, in a press release published Tuesday.

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Oath Keeper's son warns seduced Dems are sleepwalking to catastrophe with Thomas Massie

Rep. Thomas Massie, the maverick Republican facing a primary challenge from Ed Gallrein in Tuesday’s Kentucky primary, has earned goodwill from progressives and Democrats for standing up to President Donald Trump on the Epstein files and opposing the Iran war.

Melissa Strange, one of the two candidates in the Democratic primary for the 4th Congressional District, held by Massie, told Raw Story she’s seen Democrats and progressives in Kentucky rooting for Massie from the sidelines.

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A pantry van didn't show up one rainy Friday. It revealed a crisis hiding in plain sight

by Simon Galperin

Almost every Friday afternoon for the first 18 months of the pandemic, I distributed food to dozens of families in Essex County out of the back of a food pantry van.

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