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'Where they live': Trump vows he's 'getting rid of the slums' in DC anti-crime takeover

President Donald Trump vowed to eradicate "slums" as part of his takeover of Washington, D.C.

During a Monday press conference, Trump announced that he was placing the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia under federal control and threatened to deploy troops,

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'Totally false': MSNBC expert undercuts Trump before crime press conference even begins

Before Donald Trump even hit the stage in the White House briefing room to detail his plans to reportedly militarize the streets of Washington, D.C. due to a crime wave, MSNBC's Ken. Dilanian undercut the president.

With Trump late as usual, host Anna Cabrera asked Dilanian, "Talk about D.C.'s crime being down when you compare year to year? President Trump has made these outlandish claims, saying D.C. is one of the most dangerous cities in the world, not just in the US, but the world. That's clearly not accurate. Beyond D.C. comparing numbers to itself, can you set the record straight for us?"

"Yeah, that is totally false on it," he shot back. "You can Google this. Actually, there are lots of different ways to measure the most dangerous cities in the United States, but if you just look at per capita violent crime, the amounts of violence, the numbers of violent crime based on a percentage of the population, D.C. is not even in the top 25 __ it's not even close."

"And a lot of it's generally smaller and medium-sized cities that are the most dangerous," he added. "Now, look, some neighborhoods in D.C. If you stack them up as a city next to Memphis or some of these other very dangerous cities, the crime rates there are higher than in other parts. But generally, D.C. and other major American cities are not the most dangerous cities."

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'Useless': Attempt to ingratiate himself with Trump blows up in MAGA Republican's face

Embattled Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) attempted to make himself look good to President Donald Trump on Monday amid polls showing mortal danger for him in the upcoming primary — but it didn't work out well for him.

Cornyn is facing a well-funded and high-profile challenge by state Attorney General Ken Paxton, and the two have been at each other's throats for months, with Cornyn knocking Paxton's history of legal issues and accusing him of being absent from the legislative standoff as Democrats left the state to paralyze passage of a new gerrymandered congressional map.

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Judge blasts Trump as he refuses to release Epstein grand jury files

U.S. District Court Judge Paul A. Engelmayer, appointed by former President Barack Obama, denied an effort by President Donald Trump's Justice Department to release secret grand jury materials related to Jeffrey Epstein's accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

The move to release the grand jury materials came after Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel faced backlash for refusing additional Epstein files.

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GOP senators want nothing to do with Mike Johnson's latest plan: report

Reports that House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is already busy fashioning another megabill after lawmakers survived a bruising battle to hand Donald Trump the one he wanted just weeks ago is not thrilling Senate Republicans.

According to Politico, Johnson and his inner circle want to push through "one more domestic policy package" that they believe can get passed in the GOP-controlled Senate despite the slim hold they have on the chamber.

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'Miserable': Analyst highlights signs that JD Vance and his wife 'loathe each other'

Vice President J.D. Vance's marriage appears to be falling apart behind the scenes, Amanda Marcotte wrote for Salon — and the two barely seem to be capable of hiding how much they "loathe each other" at this point.

The tension between the vice president and Usha Vance, who has already been dispatched for some of President Donald Trump's geopolitical side ambitions, has already gotten to the point that comedians are making fun of it. But those jokes are coming from a real place, Marcotte continued.

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'Whispering' Republicans bewildered as Senate candidate flees glitzy fundraiser

TRAVERSE CITY – U.S. Senate candidate Mike Rogers was scheduled as one of the keynote speakers at a glitzy Republican dinner on Friday to honor the late state Sen. George McManus of Traverse City, but after an hour of shaking hands and greeting party fixtures, Rogers left early — and never addressed the crowd.

His campaign for the U.S. Senate said Rogers was happy to be there but had another campaign event in Gaylord and that the dinner was running over time, prompting his exit. But the crowd at the dinner appeared to be visibly bewildered when it was announced midway through that Rogers was no longer there and they wouldn’t get to hear him speak, seeing as how he was one of the main draws of the evening.

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'Crime, savagery, filth, and scum': Trump flips out ahead of National Guard DC deployment

Hours before Donald Trump is expected to hold a press conference to address what he believes is a crime wave occurring in the nation's capital, he took to Truth Social to paint a portrait of a city under siege that does not match crime reports.

The president has been promoting Monday's press availability where he will reportedly state he is deploying at least 1,000 National Guard troops to militarize the streets of Washington, D.C. which led one Fox News guest to claim on Sunday, "I found it troubling, because I also practiced law in the District of Columbia, that the president of the United States would say that crime is out of control. I take exception to that. Crime is not out of control in the District of Columbia."

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Trump hurls insults at female Democrats as pressure builds on White House

President Donald Trump bragged about his supposedly “aced" cognitive test Monday as pressure built in anticipation of an extremely high-stakes meeting with Russia's president.

The president also hurled insults at female congresswomen as he posted on Truth Social about his level of intelligence.

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'How are you feeling now?' Fuming Trump launches out-of-the-blue attack over impeachments

President Donald Trump unleashed an out-of-the-blue attack on the woman who led two efforts to impeach him.

Trump made a direct accusation of insider trading against former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and her husband in a Truth Social post over the weekend — and it showed he is clearly still smarting from her impeachment efforts.

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'What the heck?' Trump baffles MSNBC expert with ramshackle preparation for major meeting

Days before Donald Trump is expected to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska, there are more questions than answers as the American president floats multiple proposals — and his chief diplomat appears to be in over his head, experts said Monday.

On MSNBC's "Morning Joe," international relations experts David Ignatius and Richard Haas, the former president of the Council on Foreign Relations, were baffled by the conduct of Trump envoy Steve Witkoff, whom former Russian Ambassador Michael McFaul accused of "deeply damaging incompetence" over the weekend.

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'Reckoning looming': Trump told 'huge and risky' gambles could be disastrous for him

Seven months into his second presidency, Donald Trump is bulldozing through American institutions with a focused drive towards achieving his agenda.

But he's making gambles that are "huge and risky," and are threatening to leave him and his MAGA movement in extremely "perilous" territory, a CNN analyst warned Monday.

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'Sue them!' Trump snarls at New York Times 'bum' in confused rant

After midnight Monday — and seemingly out of nowhere — Donald Trump lashed out at the New York Times with a claim the venerable paper should be sued by people who chose to stay out of the stock market since 2016 because of the newspaper — and a former columnist's influence.

The president began by focusing his ire on Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman, apparently unaware that the columnist left the Times several months ago. Krugman wrote at the time on The Contrarian, "If you check out my Substack, you will see that I have by no means run out of energy or topics to write about. But from my perspective, the nature of my relationship with the Times had degenerated to a point where I couldn’t stay."

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