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GOP senator turns against Trump's ballroom after losing his seat to president's candidate

A Republican senator has gone on the record to state his opposition to funding President Donald Trump's ballroom project.

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), who finished last in a three-way GOP primary over the weekend after Trump endorsed a rival candidate, told reporters Tuesday that he would not vote for a $1 billion measure to fund security features for the East Wing project, reported Bloomberg.

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GOP hopefuls ghost Trump in desperate effort to hold onto key swing state

Hidden among a sea of blue campaign signs for Democrats off the side of a road in the Atlanta metro area lies a dark navy blue and green sign for a conservative candidate for governor.

The placard is for Brad Raffensperger, Georgia’s secretary of state, whom President Donald Trump famously called after the 2020 election loss, while asking Georgia officials to “find 11,000 plus votes.”

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Epstein survivors hit Trump DOJ chief with major fact check: 'He has not met with us'

Jeffrey Epstein survivors are flatly rejecting Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche's suggestion that he met with them — calling out the Trump DOJ chief just hours after his combative Senate testimony Tuesday.

"Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has not met with any of us," the group said in a statement issued Tuesday.

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Todd Blanche buried over his Ghislaine Maxwell visit while in hearing: 'The deal was in'

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche’s visit to meet with jailed Jeffrey Epstein accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell, which led to her getting moved to a minimum-security prison last year afterwards, became a flashpoint with Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI) at a Senate hearing on Tuesday.

With Blanche professing that he was unaware that the convicted sex trafficker now has a private room and access to such amenities as “puppy therapy,” Reed wasn't buying it and went on an extensive attack, accusing the former Donald Trump personal lawyer of a cover-up.

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'Entirely inappropriate!' General howls as Dem asks how many more will die for Trump

CENTCOM Commander Admiral Brad Cooper lost his cool on Tuesday when Rep. Seth Moulton (D-MA) demanded to know how many more Americans would have to die for Donald Trump's war with Iran.

"I would like to know how many more Americans we have to ask to die for this mistake," Moulton said at a House Armed Services Committee hearing. "Do you know?"

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Trump takes shots at GOP senator while dumping him for controversial MAGA wildcard

President Donald Trump officially endorsed Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in his bid to replace Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), and in doing so, issued some harsh words for the incumbent Republican senator.

“John Cornyn is a good man, and I worked well with him, but he was not supportive of me when times were tough and, despite having the Most Successful Economy in the History of our Country during my First Term,” Trump wrote on his social media platform Truth Social.

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Judge blocks battleground state from restricting poll watchers during election: report

A judge in Georgia has forced state officials in the battleground state to allow poll watchers on Tuesday as voters in the Peach State cast their ballots in the midterm primary elections, according to reports.

"A Fulton County judge just issued a temporary restraining order forcing Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office to allow poll watchers and State Election Board observers to monitor the tabulation and reporting of today’s election results," Greg Bluestein, chief political reporter for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, wrote on X.

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Trump's 'secretary of retribution' turns against president over major 'betrayal'

Ivan Raiklin, the far-right operative who built his profile as a self-styled "Secretary of Retribution" tasked with going after Donald Trump's enemies, has spent the past several days using his X account to attack the president himself.

Raiklin, a former Green Beret and Army Reserve lieutenant colonel turned constitutional lawyer, emerged as a fixture of the post-2020 election denial movement and was a central figure in efforts to overturn Joe Biden's victory. In the years since, Raiklin has rebranded himself as the self-appointed "Secretary of Retribution," compiling a "Deep State Target List" of more than 350 federal officials, journalists and lawmakers he has vowed to pursue once Trump returned to power.

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Fuming Trump lashes out after Fox News and Newsmax skip his live event

Donald Trump is nursing a fresh grudge against his favorite networks — and he aired it Tuesday morning in front of his half-built ballroom.

Strolling out to inspect his $400 million East Wing project, the president stopped to talk to reporters and quickly turned a question about health care affordability into a bitter complaint about the media — including the conservative outlets that usually carry his every word.

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He voted for Trump and now can't afford food. He'd do it again

A pair of voters who backed President Donald Trump in 2024 offered starkly contrasting assessments of his second term so far.

Gerald and Wally are both Black men who live in suburban Atlanta, grew up voting for Democrats and voted for Joe Biden in 2020 before switching to Trump over Kamala Harris, and they spoke to NPR about their view of his second presidency.

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Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson hammers Supreme Court colleagues over 'unusual' move

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson took aim at her colleagues Monday with a blistering rebuke of what she labeled as their “unusual” move, one that she claimed had been done no more than three times in the last quarter century, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.

Jackson was referring to the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in late April when it voted to effectively gut a provision of the Voting Rights Act designed to prohibit racially discriminatory voting policies. The court was deciding on a matter related to Louisiana's congressional district map, with Republicans having challenged a lower court’s order requiring state lawmakers to create a second majority-Black district.

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GOP coalition looking to 'move beyond Trump': new poll

Less than two years into his second term, a substantial portion of the Republican coalition is reported to be actively seeking a candidate who will take the party in a fundamentally different direction than Donald Trumpa significant splintering in what remains his dominant grip on GOP politics.

According to a New York Times/Siena poll, while Trump's "grip on the Republican Party remains indisputable," there are clear signs that fissures are widening within his coalition. Thirty-seven percent of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents want to see the party's next nominee move in a different direction.

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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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