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'Vindicated!' Marjorie Taylor Greene extols Mike Lindell's debunked voting machines claims

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) claimed that MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell had been "vindicated" after Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said that voting machines were "vulnerable" to hackers.

At a cabinet meeting on Thursday, Gabbard catered to President Donald Trump's claims that the 2020 presidential election had been stolen from him by revealing she was investigating voting machines.

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CNN fact-checker 'begged and pleaded' for info on key Trump claim — didn't get 'a smidgen'

CNN fact-checker Daniel Dale had his hands full Thursday after President Donald Trump held a lengthy cabinet meeting to discuss everything from the trade deficit with China to his repeated claims about immigrants coming from "mental institutions and insane asylums."

Dale intimated that there was so much information to verify that he would "stick mostly to the big news of the day" during his appearance with Boris Sanchez and Brianna Keilar.

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'No time to wait': Manhattan DA urged to seek criminal charges on Trump 'extortion racket'

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg secured the only legal conviction against now-President Donald Trump in the series of criminal cases against him, under an arcane bookkeeping fraud statute for his hush payments to an adult film star to keep damaging information away from voters in the 2016 election.

Now, he should file another case against him, wrote Jonathan Zasloff for Slate.

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Lawmakers scrambled to cash in as Trump's bromance with Musk blossomed: report

New reporting by Forbes revealed that at least 10 members of Congress traded Tesla stock of up to $1.27 million after Elon Musk endorsed Donald Trump for the presidency.

The three dozen trades, which occurred after July 12, 2024, raised new concerns over congressional conflict of interest since Musk is now entrenched in the federal government.

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Major NYT report exposes Trump's 'formal plan' to seize control of Greenland

The New York Times is reporting that President Donald Trump's administration has crafted a "formal plan" to take control of Greenland — although for the moment the plan does not involve using military force to seize the territory.

Instead, the Times reports that the Trump administration is crafting a propaganda campaign aimed at convincing Greenlanders that it would be in their best interests to join the United States.

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'New low for Congress': Experts shocked at bill that would smash 150-year precedent

Congressional Republicans pushed through a bill on Thursday that could hinder voting rights across the nation, according to a Democracy Docket analysis.

“For over a century and a half, the U.S. government has largely acted as a force to protect and expand voting rights — often in opposition to efforts by state or local officials to limit them. Until now, neither house of Congress had ever passed legislation to significantly restrict access to the ballot,” the analysis stated.

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'He should be in a padded room playing with his own drool': The View hosts bash Trump

"The View" began Thursday with one co-host gesticulating wildly to express the chaos seen from the White House for the past few weeks.

"Things have been happening like this," said Whoopi Goldberg, discussing the twist in President Donald Trump's trade war.

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Trump’s EPA plans to stop collecting greenhouse gas emissions data from most polluters

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

The Environmental Protection Agency is planning to eliminate long-standing requirements for polluters to collect and report their emissions of the heat-trapping gases that cause climate change. The move, ordered by a Trump appointee, would affect thousands of industrial facilities across the country, including oil refineries, power plants and coal mines as well as those that make petrochemicals, cement, glass, iron and steel, according to documents reviewed by ProPublica.

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'Republicans have put themselves in a bind' with budget plan: MSNBC's Ryan Noble​s

MSNBC's Ryan Nobles on Thursday said that congressional Republicans have made things more difficult for themselves as they move to try to pass President Donald Trump's budget package.

After Republicans in the House of Representatives successfully passed a blueprint that had been passed in the United States Senate, Nobles outlined the tight window the party now has to get its work done.

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Biden official's criticism of Trump so strong that it 'led to an additional sell-off': CNN

Former treasury secretary Janet Yellen denounced president Donald Trump's tariffs and identified the reason she believes that he backed down from most of them.

The president's sweeping, so-called reciprocal tariffs went into effect Wednesday against global trading partners, but he pulled back most of them later that day as markets shuddered, and Yellen told CNN International that he paused the policy to avoid further damage to the U.S. economy.

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'Pandemic-sized shock': Small business owners bemoan Trump trade agenda

President Donald Trump's tariff-based trade policy "could have a pandemic-sized shock on U.S. small businesses," according to new reporting in Politico.

"Even with Trump announcing on Wednesday a 90-day pause in massive reciprocal tariffs, imports from China, on which many small businesses rely, will be subject to duties of up to 125 percent," wrote Politico's Katherine Hapgood. "Imports from the rest of the world are also subject to a 10 percent tariff, and sectoral tariffs, such as an additional 25 percent on steel and aluminum imports, are still in place."

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Trump labor official throws herself birthday party at department HQ amid DOGE cuts: report

Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer reportedly threw a birthday party for herself at the agency's headquarters as the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) pushed for dramatic cuts.

The Bulwark viewed photos "showing a large room with scattered cocktail tables, along with wine and Chavez-DeRemer's face on multiple TVs."

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'I don't care!' Conservative snaps at MSNBC host with demand for 1,000% tariffs on China

A clearly frustrated Kevin O'Leary took out his anger on MSNBC host José Díaz-Balart on Thursday morning with his complaints that Donald Trump's tariff on China is not near enough to make up for his own business losses.

Multi-millionaire O'Leary, a CNBC contributor who also appears on Shark Tank, claimed there is an uneven playing for him when trying to compete with the Chinese and that he doesn't "care" about market "volatility" created by massive tariff costs.

Noting that he just testified before Congress as Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs, now on pause, have caused worldwide economic chaos, O'Leary, a Canadian was on the verge of shouting as he explained the unfairness of it all.

ALSO READ: 'Not much I can do': GOP senator gives up fight against Trump's tariffs

"This narrative with China is not just about tariffs," he began. "Since China joined the WTO [World Trade Organization] in 2020, or it's actually 2000, they have not abided by the rules in any single year. There is no way you can figure out or settle a trade dispute with them although they said they'd agree to do that, they never did."

"They have been constantly stealing American IP [intellectual property], including many from my companies and we have not been able to litigate there, there is no resolution available to us," he elaborated. "They are using our financial markets."

"I was testifying yesterday at the China hearings in Washington, and I said, I've had enough and I expect you, lawmakers and the administration to finally go to task and settle this once and for all," he loudly exclaimed. "Because I don't care if it's 1,000 percent tariffs. They have to come to the table now and not just settle this trade war, they need to settle all of this unbalanced situation."

After stating, "I would like this thing worked out. I don't care about the volatility, I don't care if Trump ratchets it up 25 percent a day," the MSNBC host pressed him with, "What do you mean you don't care about volatility? If volatility has a direct impact on us as consumers ––."

"Because we have to fix this problem once and for all," O'Leary snapped at Díaz-Balart. "It's killing us! It's killing small business in America. It's killing large businesses, all the IP these guys steal."

You can watch below or at the link.

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