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Trump threatens NBC license after Warnock interview, urges FCC crackdown

President Donald Trump escalated his attacks on the press by threatening NBC’s broadcast license after the network aired an interview with Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA), unleashing a Truth Social rant accusing the network of bias, smearing Warnock with personal allegations, and questioning the separation of church and state. Trump suggested the Federal Communications Commission should step in, complaining that networks use public airwaves “at no charge” and should be forced to pay or face consequences. The outburst came just hours after FCC Chair Brendan Carr told senators he has the authority to shut down broadcast networks over satirical speech.

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'Hunger Games America': Trump mocked for familiar new 'patriotic' competition

President Donald Trump alarmed many Americans by announcing a new "patriotic" competition that some said resembled The Hunger Games.

In a video posted by Freedom 250 on Thursday, the president promised "to give America the most spectacular birthday party the world."

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'Grotesqueries have to stop': Famed GOP strategist warns Trump how presidency could end

Former GOP White House official Karl Rove on Thursday warned that the Trump administration needs to get its messaging on track and stop the president's tendency towards "grotesqueries" in the time left before the midterms — "or else the president won’t like the outcome."

Rove is best known for his time as former President George W. Bush's deputy chief of staff from 2001 to 2007, and is often credited as one of the leading architects of that administration's War in Iraq. Since leaving the office, he has become a prominent GOP political analyst, known for frequent appearances on Fox News and, more recently, his criticisms of Donald Trump's unhelpful excesses.

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NY Times forced to issue statement after columnist spotted in new Epstein photos

The New York Times issued a statement explaining why one of the newspaper's columnists appeared in several newly released photos from Jeffrey Epstein's estate.

The statement on David Brooks came minutes after House Democrats released a new batch of photos obtained from the late sex offender's estate showed the Times columnist at an event.

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'Unorthodox lethal campaign': Stephen Miller accused of spearheading controversial efforts

Stephen Miller shifted the Trump administration's attack on Mexican drug cartels to its "unorthodox lethal campaign" on Venezuela, according to a new report.

The White House Deputy Chief of Staff and architect of Trump's aggressive immigration policy reportedly took a leading role through the Homeland Security Committee in September, according to a new Washington Post report Thursday.

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​House Dems release new Epstein photos showing 'Lolita' quotes written on female body

House Oversight Democrats have released another batch of photos obtained from Jeffrey Epstein's estate.

The committee's Democratic minority posted more than four dozen new photos of the late sex offender and his associates, including Bill Gates, Noam Chomsky and David Brooks, along with cryptic close-up shots of a female body and photos of various documents.

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The future of Charlie Kirk's group on the line as warring factions meet in AZ: report

The future of Turning Point USA, which played a significant role in Donald Trump's 2024 re-election, may be determined during its annual convention beginning today as internal divisions threaten the organization's cohesion.

Following founder Charlie Kirk's death, his widow Erika has assumed leadership of the organization, however she faces the challenge of unifying the group during AmericaFest, a four-day event in her hometown of Phoenix, Arizona.

According to MSNBC's Andy Campbell, recent weeks have been turbulent for Turning Point USA, which finds itself at the center of organizational infighting, finger-pointing and conspiracy theories surrounding Kirk's death.

Erika Kirk must navigate competing pressures from multiple factions. White nationalist Nick Fuentes has criticized her handling of Kirk's death, characterizing her public appearances as "disingenuous" and "very fake." Simultaneously, podcaster Candace Owens has created friction within the organization, making unfounded claims that there was a Jewish conspiracy behind Kirk's death.

The convention will feature prominent MAGA figures competing for visibility before Kirk's audience, many of whom have disputed circumstances surrounding his death and speculated about potential successors.

“Owens in particular has been a thorn in the side of Erika Kirk and TPUSA since Charlie was shot and killed at a speaking event in Utah, allegedly by 22-year-old Tyler Robinson,” the report continued before adding, “Kirk’s death leaves a number of question marks for TPUSA, including who might fill his shoes in the podcasting and punditry space, where he garnered an audience of millions. Though Erika Kirk currently sits atop TPUSA as its CEO, her husband’s audience and podcasting empire remain very much up for grabs.”

Campbell notes that no clear personality has emerged as a natural leader for the nationwide youth political movement. AmericaFest's scheduled meet-and-greets with far-right media personalities including Jack Posobiec, Alex Clark, and Michael Knowles may help identify potential successors to Kirk's prominent role in conservative media and punditry.

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Coldplay kiss cam woman speaks for first time — and reveals fear for life

The woman behind the viral Coldplay kiss cam moment revealed the public shaming she has endured since she was caught on a Jumbotron at the concert in the arms of her married boss — and why she is no longer keeping quiet about it.

Kristin Cabot described the Jumbotron moment in July and months of "drowning in the vitriol of strangers" since a TikTok captured it, garnering 100 million views in just days, The New York Times reported Thursday. Cabot has been doxxed, had death threats and harassed over what happened.

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'He's in serious trouble': Trump warned his worst issue to 'manifest over next six months'

An analyst Thursday warned that President Donald Trump's worst issue is coming — and it's only a matter of time.

Salon columnist Heather Digby Parton called Trump's primetime speech Wednesday night "a masterclass in gaslighting" and described how his move to ignore or gloss over "the economic vibes" has put him in the same position as his predecessor and favorite person to blame: former President Joe Biden. And with the 2026 midterms just months away, he's putting Republicans worried about elections in a tough position.

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Epstein directed a survivor to have sex with male guests at party Trump attended: report

A new investigation has found President Donald Trump and the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein formed an intense bond over their pursuit of women.

The president has provided shifting and often contradictory accounts of his relationship with the disgraced financier or decades, and the New York Times took a deep dive into their friendship on the eve of the congressionally mandated release of investigative files into Epstein's sex trafficking network.

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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent flees DC restaurant after being heckled

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reportedly left a restaurant in Washington, D.C. after a woman heckled him.

NOTUS reporter Daniella Diaz said she was dining in Adam's Morgan on Wednesday when she noticed the woman heckling Bessent.

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'Doesn't look good for the GOP': GOP legend says Trump is facing 'furious party in revolt'

Donald Trump's lack of self-discipline and disjointed public statements have set the stage for a difficult second half of his final term, during which he will face aggressive scrutiny from Democrats and disappointment from Republican lawmakers who feel he has abandoned them.

In a Wall Street Journal column, former Republican White House Chief of Staff Karl Rove argues that Trump's recent weeks of confrontational exchanges with reporters and erratic social media posts demonstrate his failure to recognize the political danger ahead.

With the president's approval ratings declining across multiple voter concerns, Rove contends that Trump's exclusive focus on energizing his MAGA base blinds him to the approaching political reckoning that threatens Republican congressional majorities.

Rove cited Trump's recent rally at a Pennsylvania casino, noting that had the president maintained focus on substantive issues, "he would have eventually offered something genuinely reassuring to voters." Instead, the rally underperformed, requiring Vice President JD Vance to conduct damage control. Trump subsequently compounded the problem with inflammatory comments about Rob Reiner and his wife Michele's deaths.

"Mr. Trump's comments were met with universal horror and revulsion. What the president said about the Reiners didn't diminish them. It diminished him," Rove wrote. He urged Trump to cease such behavior, emphasizing that every remaining day matters in shaping the political landscape.

"The presidents' grotesqueries have to stop. His team has 10½ months before voters decide the shape of his final two years as president. Every day matters. Presidential postings like that chew up valuable time that should be spent winning over tepid supporters or persuading anyone open to voting Republican."

Rove warned that without immediate strategic changes, Trump faces confrontation from both parties in Congress, combined with Democratic investigations and opposition.

"It doesn't look good for the GOP next year. The White House is on the wrong track. It had better get its messaging right—both its formal attempts at directing the conversation and Mr. Trump's spontaneous social-media rants. Or else the president won't like the outcome. A furious party in revolt against its executive, who is plagued by Democratic investigations and opposition. Time's a-wasting," he concluded.

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Tip line urges public to snitch on transgender people using bathrooms

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is encouraging the public to help enforce the state’s “bathroom bill” via a tip line for suspected violations of the new law designed to restrict which facilities transgender people can use.

Senate Bill 8, also known as the Texas Women’s Privacy Act, requires government buildings, schools and colleges to restrict access to restrooms and locker rooms based on sex assigned at birth. If someone does enter the “wrong” bathroom, institutions, not the individual, are punished by the state, with $25,000 first-time fines and $125,000 subsequent penalties per day. Individuals can also sue agencies if they are in a restroom and are "affected" by a violation of the law.

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