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Court thwarts Trump election meddling scheme by nixing Michigan voter rolls demand

A federal appeals court ruled the Trump administration has no legal right to demand voters' private data, dealing a fresh blow to its unlawful bid to control American elections.

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals handed down the 2-1 decision Wednesday, siding with Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson (D-MI), who refused to turn over the birthdates, partial Social Security numbers, and driver's license numbers of every registered voter in the state.

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Expert sounds alarm as Supreme Court reveals 'no one left to pull it back from the brink'

A Supreme Court watcher was alarmed after a series of decisions handed down by the High Court shredded a long-standing myth about the body.

Mark Joseph Stern, a senior writer at Slate, argued in a new article that four decisions the Supreme Court handed down on Tuesday were a "blunt reminder that the GOP appointees remain in total control of the court" because each of the cases was decided by a 6-3 majority. Stern also argued that the opinions show the Court's claims that it does not always rule along ideological lines is "dubious at best."

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'Lost my temper': Republican spills on his blowup with Trump

WASHINGTON — White House aides tend to shield President Donald Trump from opinions that diverge from his own worldview, but this afternoon, he got chewed out by one of his fellow Republicans at the U.S. Capitol.

After four Senate Republicans bucked the president last night and voted to limit his ability to wage war against Iran without congressional approval, the president aired his frustration with members of his own party at today’s Senate Republican Party lunch at the Capitol.

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Trump fires back after heated clash with GOP lawmakers: 'I don't like a few people'

President Donald Trump took a swing at defiant Republicans following a reported clash between himself and a scorned GOP lawmaker.

Trump was attending the Senate GOP lunch after refusing to sign a bipartisan housing bill and claiming he needed Republicans to back the Save America Act. During the event, Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) apparently confronted Trump over the legislation and Iran war. Cassidy and Trump have had a contentious relationship, with Trump endorsing a GOP challenger who ousted Cassidy in his primary bid for re-election.

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Backlash as GOP lawmaker doubles down on using AI on bills: 'Incompetent intentionally'

A Florida Republican's defense bill amendment summary went viral after its text revealed the office had submitted AI output — complete with a chatbot label — without editing a word.

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) used Anthropic's Claude to draft the amendment summary. The document that circulated contained a timestamp, garbled filler text, and the label "Claude responded:" — copied and submitted without a single edit.

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Stephen Miller's latest screed trounced as 'straight up Nazi rhetoric'

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller posted six words Tuesday and walked straight into accusations of Nazi rhetoric.

The post, published on X, read: "Change the voters, change the country."

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Trump and scorned Republican get into heated yelling match at GOP lunch: report

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) started yelling at President Donald Trump at a Senate GOP luncheon on Wednesday, according to reports from insiders at the event.

Trump had vowed earlier Wednesday to block a bipartisan affordable housing bill Congress had given final passage to the night before, declining to sign the bill and fueling panic from lawmakers. Just hours later, Republicans were gathered together when the reported clash between the president and the longtime GOP lawmaker, who lost his re-election to a Trump-endorsed candidate, came to a head.

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Court deals a deathblow to Trump's executive order on voting rights

Just as Donald Trump entered a luncheon with Republican Senators to air out their grievances with each other over the SAVE America Act, designed to create roadblocks to voting, a federal judge delivered a massive blow to a voting rights executive order that had similar aims.

According to Associated Press reporting, U.S. District Court Judge Denise Casper in Boston converted a preliminary injunction from a year ago into a permanent ban on Trump's first executive order on elections—effectively ending his attempt to overhaul voting procedures nationwide.

Casper's ruling directly rejected Trump's core argument that the lawsuit brought by Democratic state attorneys general was premature because the rules hadn't yet been implemented, the AP reported before adding the judge affirmed "... that the Constitution gives states and Congress the authority to regulate elections, and that Trump’s requirements violated the separation of powers."

"The Constitution does not grant the President any specific powers over elections," Casper wrote in her decision.

The order Trump attempted to impose would have required voters to provide documentary proof of citizenship when registering—a voter suppression tactic reportedly designed to disenfranchise millions of eligible Americans. It also would have prevented mail ballots from being counted if they arrived after Election Day, even if postmarked by the deadline, and would have withheld federal funding from states that refused to comply.

According to the report, the ruling is yet another in a string of judicial defeats for Trump's elections agenda, noting "He [Trump] has since signed another executive order on elections, seeking to create a national voter list and limit mail balloting. That directive also faces multiple legal challenges."

Insiders reveal Trump’s disturbing ‘fascination’ with gory details of deadly attack

President Donald Trump was reportedly “fascinated” with the gory details regarding Israel’s Operation Grim Beeper, the 2024 attack that saw thousands of pagers explode simultaneously and brutally maim thousands of Lebanese Hezbollah members and civilians alike, including children, according to a new book.

“Trump ‘regaled’ his guests with horror stories of the destruction that the explosions had wrought,” reads an excerpt from the new book “Regime Change” by New York Times journalists Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan, as flagged by Zeteo in its report Wednesday.

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Lawmaker gives Trump nominee a tongue-lashing over insulting Senators: 'You're telling me'

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) pressed Konstantinos Ligris, President Donald Trump's nominee for Assistant Attorney General, during a tense hearing on Capitol Hill Wednesday after discovering the Department of Justice hopeful had posted several social media attacks on lawmakers.

Whitehouse mentioned the comments during the nominee's testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, pushing Ligris to respond.

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Trump is 'sleepwalking into a bruising wakeup call': columnist

There's a peculiar dialect spoken only at Donald Trump rallies, one where "winning" and being "loved" mean roughly the same thing, observed a new column.

The Bulwark's Andrew Eggers pointed out how the 80-year-old president, greeting supporters this week at a factory in Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley, declared “I won this place so much," attacked "Dumocrats" and murmured "there’s so much love in the room." His followers lapped it all up – and the president's spirits got a much-needed boost, according to the analyst.

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'Say something!' Trump nominee floors Dem after calling cops 'dumb as dirt'

One of President Donald Trump's nominees, who was up for the federal job of funding police departments across the country, refused Wednesday to apologize for calling cops "dumb as dirt."

Konstantinos Ligris, Trump's pick to lead the Justice Department's Office of Justice Programs, faced a barrage of questions at his Senate Judiciary Committee hearing from Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL), the committee's ranking member.

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Mike Johnson scrambles to defend Trump as president cuts legs out from under Republicans

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) was put on the spot on Wednesday afternoon when Donald Trump abruptly cancelled a highly anticipated signing ceremony for a housing bill that Republicans were counting on to stop their slide in the polls.

As workers were setting up chairs and GOP lawmakers began showing up for the signing of the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, the president pulled the plug on the ceremony by writing on Truth Social, “Today’s Housing News Conference and Signing is hereby cancelled until such time as we pass the desperately needed SAVE AMERICA ACT, which I consider to be a National Emergency.”

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