SmartNews

'Embarrassing': Elon Musk said to have 'little to show' for his time as 'first buddy'

Elon Musk will be leaving Washington with little to show for his controversial time in government, according to a new analysis.

The tech billionaire spent more than $288 million of his own money to get Donald Trump re-elected and was rewarded with a perch overseeing the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, but Axios reported that the most powerful political outsider ever is walking away with "a legacy of self-destruction."

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Judge blocked 'off-the-rails' Trump with order that won't be easy to reverse: legal expert

A judge threw up a serious hurdle to president Donald Trump's executive order that would substantially roll back voting rights.

U.S. District judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly paused the president's March 25 executive order, titled "Preserving and Protecting the Integrity of American Elections," instructing the independent Election Assistance Commission to change the national mail voter registration form to require applicants to prove their U.S. citizenship, and former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance wrote on her Substack page that the ruling would be difficult to overturn.

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Mike Lindell lawyers threatened by judge over briefs loaded with AI-generated fake cases

A federal judge put My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell's lawyers "on notice" this week over nearly 30 citations in a legal brief submitted in a defamation lawsuit involving Eric Coomer, the former director of product security and strategy for voting technology supplier Dominion.

According to a report from KUSA's Kyle Clark, U.S. District Judge Nina Wang accused the attorneys for Lindell, who maintains the 2020 presidential election was stolen from Donald Trump, of using generative AI to supplement the brief.

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'Not a good thing': GOP lawmaker breaks with Trump when pressed on CNN

A House Republican broke with President Donald Trump late Thursday on CNN when pressed about his thoughts on efforts to end the war in Ukraine.

Rep. Rich McCormick (R-GA) joined "The Source" with anchor Kaitlan Collins. The congressman, who previously served in the Marine Corps and now sits on the House Armed Services and Foreign Affairs Committee, was brought on to give his thoughts on Trump possibly "rushing into making an agreement" between Russia and Ukraine that could "hurt his legacy."

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'Thin ice': How Trump's new pro-natalist stance threatens reproductive care

As the Trump administration considers ways to encourage Americans to have more children — from a $5,000 “baby bonus” to a “National Medal of Motherhood” — both anti-abortion and abortion-rights clinics face uncertainty about how such policies might affect their federal funding.

For groups like Planned Parenthood, which provide abortions, contraceptives, sexually transmitted infection testing and other health services, the outlook appears bleak. Clinics have started shuttering following a freeze of tens of millions of dollars in federal funds.

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‘Who’s that guy?' Rachel Maddow mocks Trump's meme coin ad — with flattering rendition

MSNBC's Rachel Maddow warned viewers Thursday night they wouldn't take her at her word — they'd just have to see it.

Maddow was referring to an advertisement hawking President Donald Trump's meme coin.

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'Terrifying': RFK Jr's autism registry plan has parents 'panicked' kids will be 'hunted'

Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s plan to create a "registry" of autistic people in the United States has already triggered an uproar from scared and suspicious parents worried about how this information will be used by the federal government, Rolling Stone reported on Thursday.

This follows a controversial speech made by Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist who has baselessly linked autism to immunizations, calling the disorder an "epidemic," flatly rejecting the widely-held consensus view that a large part of the increase in autism diagnosis is due to better screening, and vowing to find the environmental "cause" of autism by September, a promise HHS officials are trying to walk back. Above all, he described autistic people as unable to date, pay taxes or hold a job.

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'Difficult to defend': Pete Hegseth buried over new revelations of his 'dirty line'

Yet another shoe has dropped in the "Signalgate" scandal engulfing the Pentagon, as a new report from ABC News reveals Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth used an unsecured commercial internet connection on a personal computer — a so-called "dirty line" — to communicate via Signal in his Pentagon office.

"A 'dirty line' is the nickname given to a commercial internet line that is used to connect to websites that would not be available on the Pentagon's unclassified (NIPR) or classified (SIPR) lines," said the report. This line, set up at Hegseth's personal request to allow for the use of Signal, "does not have any of the firewall protections that the Defense Department's unclassified system has, so that makes it potentially susceptible to being monitored particularly if sensitive information is being communicated."

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'My goodness gracious!' CNN forecaster floored as Trump meme coin surges while polls sink

President Donald Trump's poll numbers might be sinking — but various assets and schemes tied to his name are on the way up in value, CNN data analyst Harry Enten told anchor Erin Burnett on Thursday evening.

Among the most prominent examples is the Trump crypto "meme coin," which was at rock bottom shortly after being introduced at the start of the year, but surged this week after Trump announced that a select group of holders of the coin will get invites to the White House.

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'Fraud': DeSantises under fire from GOP after millions diverted to kill ballot measure

Questions are swirling around Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis after a new report found that $10 million from a Medicaid settlement was diverted through a charity linked to his wife to political committees to kill a ballot initiative.

That's according to a new report in The New York Times on Thursday evening, which peeled back the curtain on what it called a "mystery" surrounding the missing $10 million.

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'Complicit': Dems fire warning shot at law firms that caved to Trump

Democrats in Congress are putting the law firms that cut deals with President Donald Trump to give the administration free legal services on notice, reported The New Republic on Thursday: if Trump committed extortion to get those deals, you could end up with legal liability too.

Trump cut a number of these deals with "big law" firms like Paul Weiss and Skadden Arps that represented clients in anti-Trump cases before the president took office, right around the same time he either rescinded or decided not to issue executive orders barring these law firms from contracting with the federal government or accessing federal buildings. These deals generally involve committing tens to hundreds of millions in pro bono work for causes the administration approves of, eliminating diversity policies in the office, and committing to offer counsel to Trump-supporting clients.

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'Serious consequences': Trump agency threatens staff who leak to media

Labor Department Official Warns That Staff Who Speak With Journalists Face “Serious Legal Consequences”

by Mark Olalde

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

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'Lady Trump' scores pardon after conviction for spending memorial money on herself

"Lady Trump" — a failed gubernatorial candidate convicted of fraud — received a pardon courtesy of the MAGA leader.

Michele Fiore, a former Las Vegas City Councilwoman and state lawmaker in Nevada, was convicted of multiple federal crimes for misusing charitable donations. She was found guilty of six counts of wire fraud and a count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

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