Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

SmartNews

GOP leaders forced to scrap their own vote facing uprising from their own party

House Republican leaders scrapped Friday's scheduled votes as an internal party standoff threatened to derail the chamber's legislative agenda, according to a notice sent to members Thursday.

The impasse stemmed from GOP hard-liners blocking action over the stalled SAVE America Act, an elections bill currently stuck in the Senate, Politico reported.

Keep reading... Show less

'Gasps' heard at Supreme Court as Alito takes personal shot at Justice Sotomayor

A decision by Justice Sonia Sotomayor to take 12 minutes of the court’s time on Thursday to read her dissent in a 6-3 ruling that makes it significantly harder for asylum seekers who traveled through Mexico and South America to enter the US provoked Justice Sam Alito to take an unseemly potshot at her, which stunned court regulars.

According to MS NOW legal analyst Lisa Rubin, arch-conservative Alito sat and listened to a very “calm” Sotomayor read her dissent, with Rubin pointing out, “That is certainly not unusual.”

Keep reading... Show less

Judge 'dunks on' Todd Blanche as he's ripped for no 'degree of trustworthiness'

Reporter Scott MacFarlane said a federal judge just "dunked on" acting Attorney General Todd Blanche in a four-page order declaring his word about a Trump slush fund cannot be trusted.

MacFarlane wrote on X that the order was "just remarkable" — and called it remarkable a second time for good measure. The judge, he said, "clearly doesn't trust the statements of the nation's top law enforcement official."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump nominee gets all he can handle at heated hearing: 'You can't even do basic facts!'

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) grilled a Trump nominee during the Senate Housing, Banking and Urban Affairs Committee on Thursday.

Warren reminded Christopher Phelan, the president's pick for White House Council of Economic Advisers, that if approved for the advisory job his role would be focused on offering "objective economic advice."

Keep reading... Show less

'The Senate sucks': Freedom Caucus joins Trump’s tantrum as GOP infighting deepens

WASHINGTON — Work in the U.S. House of Representatives has, once again, been ground to a halt by the far right wing of the Republican Party, as the Freedom Caucus joined President Donald Trump’s demand that no legislation moves until Senate Republicans pass his sweeping election reform measure, the SAVE America Act.

“The Senate sucks,” Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) told congressional reporters at a Thursday morning press conference.

Keep reading... Show less

Chaos as visibly angry Alito accuses colleague of blindsiding him: 'Tensions hit a climax'

A bitter clash among Supreme Court justices came into view Thursday through a pair of immigration rulings, in which Justice Samuel Alito accused his liberal colleagues of blindsiding him.

The friction emerged when Alito announced the court's decision in an asylum case, adopting a narrow interpretation of what it means for a migrant to have "arrived" in the United States under federal law — a reading that makes it significantly harder for asylum seekers who traveled through Mexico and South America to qualify unless they physically set foot on U.S. soil, reported CNN's Joan Biskupic.

Keep reading... Show less

'Catastrophic' ruling shows Supreme Court aims to consolidate more power for Trump: expert

Appearing on MS NOW just as the Supreme Court handed down a ruling that allows Donald Trump to immediately deport immigrants from Haiti and Syria who have been granted temporary protected status (TPS), ex-U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance was appalled.

Writing for the 6-3 majority, conservative Justice Samuel Alito asserted that lower courts cannot stop the federal government's determination about TPS status, opening the door for a mass purge of immigrants desired by the president and White House adviser Stephen Miller.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's election meddling crashes into a wall as judge blocks mail-in voting scheme

President Donald Trump's campaign to take control of U.S. elections suffered a blow after a federal judge blocked his order to limit mail-in voting.

On Thursday, U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani, sitting in Boston, voided the core of Trump's March 2026 executive order — the one that tried to make the U.S. Postal Service decide who gets a mail ballot and threatened criminal prosecution of election workers who didn't comply.

Keep reading... Show less

'People will die': Justice pens dire dissent as Supreme Court backs Trump on asylum

The Supreme Court's conservative super majority on Thursday sided with the Trump administration in a 6-3 ruling, and in a sharp dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor described the consequences of turning away asylum-seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Following the ruling in Markwayne Mullin, Secretary of Homeland Security v. Al Otro Lado, Sotomayor spoke from the bench and reminded the high court of a historical moment in 1939 when more than 900 Jewish refugees who were attempting to flee persecution in Nazi Germany boarded the M.S. St. Louis in Hamburg, Germany, and were turned away from Cuba and the United States during the Holocaust. Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson also joined the dissent.

Keep reading... Show less

Stammering Marco Rubio caught off guard by question about who joined his UAE meeting

Secretary of State Marco Rubio appeared to be caught off guard by a reporter asking why President Donald Trump's son-in-law tagged along to a high-level meeting with foreign officials.

Michael Boulos, the husband of Tiffany Trump, sat beside the secretary of state during a meeting on Wednesday with UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, and Rubio stammered when asked Thursday in Kuwait about the president's family member's presence.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's closed-door meltdown backfires with GOP senators: insider

President Donald Trump's obsession with forcing Senate Republicans to pass the SAVE America Act may have catastrophically backfired, by turning more Republicans he needs against him.

The collapse manifested itself on Wednesday when Trump met with Senate Republicans behind closed doors for what was supposed to be a persuasion mission. Instead, he may have made matters worse for himself, reports Politico

Keep reading... Show less

Liberal justice scorches Supreme Court colleagues over 'remarkable and regrettable' ruling

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson called out the majority following a 7-2 Supreme Court ruling that sided with pesticide manufacturers and determined the EPA is the arbiter — not state courts — to decide on cancer warnings on labels.

The ruling in Monsanto v. Durnell reversed the Missouri Court of Appeals after John Durnell sued Monsanto in Missouri state court, claiming 20 years of using Roundup, a glyphosate-based herbicide designed to control weeds, caused his non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He argued Monsanto failed to include a cancer warning on its label. A jury awarded him more than $1 million.

Keep reading... Show less

Pete Hegseth condemned by ex-Fox & Friends colleague after 'huge' military loss

Fox & Friends co-host Brian Kilmeade broke with his former colleague, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, calling his latest move a "huge loss for our country."

Kilmeade wrote on X on Wednesday morning, reacting to a Wall Street Journal report on the forced retirement of Gen. Christopher Donahue. He compared losing the general to "losing Tom Brady in the prime of his career."

Keep reading... Show less