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Morning Joe dredges up Nikki Haley's greatest hits on 'unhinged' Donald Trump

Reacting to Nikki Haley's full-throated endorsement of Donald Trump at the Republican National Convention on Tuesday night, "Morning Joe" co-host Joe Scarborough took time on Wednesday morning to read off some of the former South Carolina's governor's harshest criticisms of the man she has continually labled "unhinged."

After showing Haley speaking to the GOP crowd -- and also being booed — co-host Mika Brzezinski started out by using a clip of Haley saying, "We need a commander in chief who can lead 24 hours a day, and seven days a week. America cannot afford four more years of a ''Weekend at Bernie's' presidency," to point out, "Wait, didn't we have that with all of that executive time and golfing?" referencing Trump.

"I'm so confused by what they said during the primary," Scarborough contributed.

Later picking up a piece of paper and reading from it, Scarborough, remarked, "So, let's just go through some of these, looking at old articles here. Nikki Haley told the Wall Street Journal" that electing Donald Trump would be, quote, 'Suicide for our country.' She called Donald Trump 'unhinged.' She questioned Donald Trump's mental fitness and demanded that he take a cognitive test."

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'Less integrity than a Boeing 737': Comedian 'Liberal Redneck' recounts night with Vance

Trae Crowder – a comedian and progressive influencer known as "the liberal redneck" — just revealed what Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) is like when the cameras aren't rolling based on a personal experience with the presumptive 2024 Republican vice presidential nominee.

In a video posted to Instagram on Tuesday from his truck, Crowder unleashed on the Ohio Republican and told his hundreds of thousands of followers that while he had a lot in common with Vance, he lost respect for him when realizing he didn't actually stand on anything he said. He noted that it was "disappointing" that the only time a "white trash hillbilly" like him would get into the White House was if he was an "Ivy League-educated venture capitalist who first rose to fame by selling us all out."

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No report on Trump’s health 3 days after assassination attempt

Exactly 72 hours after the attempted assassination of Donald Trump, neither his campaign nor his doctors have released any relevant information about the extent of his injuries, or any update on the health of the 78-year old man who just became the Republican Party's presidential nominee.

While seeing apparent blood on his ear and dripping across his face, Americans have not been seen a medical report about the effects of the shooting that did take a supporter's life and seriously wounded two other people.

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J.D. Vance's college roommate busts him over why he flipped on Trump

During an appearance on CNN early Wednesday morning, Sen. J.D. Vance's (R-OH) college roommate when they both attended Yale Law School called into question the GOP senator's purported belief in Donald Trump's MAGA philosophy.

Speaking with CNN host Kasie Hunt from Spain, Josh McLaurin — now a Democratic state senator in Georgia — first began by stating that he thought long and hard about releasing the now-notorious text he received from Vance where he called Trump "America's Hitler," but felt the public needed to know how the GOP senator from Ohio really thought about the man whose ticket he has now joined.

Having said that, he pointed out that Vance's conversion to becoming a MAGA warrior is suspect.

"Here's what I think," he began. "I don't buy his explanation the way that he says it. I think his instincts told him what Americans see for themselves: that Trump has a narcissistic style personality, cared about attention and fame, wants to be the showrunner who picks among people in dramatic fashion think doing an Apprentice-style VP selection process — that's Trump."

ALSO READ: Do presidents’ popularity increase after assassination attempts? History has an answer.

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Controversial Project 2025 pitched by right-wing conservatives on RNC outskirts

MILWAUKEE — Despite former President Donald Trump’s denial of any connection to the conservative presidential transition plan known as Project 2025, the initiative’s driver, the Heritage Foundation, promoted the platform mere blocks from the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, attracting officials and personalities from the party’s most conservative wing.

The project has taken heat from Democrats in recent weeks, who are warning of the plan’s ambitions — among them passing the most stringent abortion ban the next Republican administration can get through Congress and lowering the corporate tax rate — and Trump, the GOP presidential nominee, has sought to distance himself from the proposal.

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'Deeply offensive': Trump biographer slams new Cannon ruling

As the Republican National Convention opened on Monday, Donald Trump scored a major legal victory when a Trump-appointed federal judge in Florida dismissed the criminal case against the former president for illegally keeping classified national security documents after his presidency ended. Judge Aileen Cannon ruled Attorney General Merrick Garland had no power to appoint Jack Smith as a special counsel. Her ruling stunned many legal experts, and the Justice Department plans to appeal. This comes after the conservative-dominated Supreme Court recently granted Trump, and presidents more generally, almost complete immunity from prosecution for “official” actions taken in office. “This was an opinion in search of a result,” says Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist David Cay Johnston, who has covered Trump for decades. “This is just deeply offensive, and I suspect it will be overturned, but the real result is there is no prospect that Donald Trump will be tried before the November elections.”


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The GOP pretends it's pro-union

The Republican Party began its national convention, with a bow to … (wait for it) … organized labor. You read that correctly.

A few days ago, the Republican National Committee sent out an email with this remarkably ironic headline:

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'All wearing maxi pads on their ear': RNC's bizarre new Trump prop spurs hilarity

A new prop appears to have gained steam at the Republican National Convention — ear bandages.

MAGA world is no stranger to Donald Trump-themed merchandise, whether it's Trump-themed shoes or a new campaign T-shirt featuring his new running mate's name.

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'From an SNL skit': Republican ridiculed for saying Trump would put criminals in jail

Iowa's top law enforcement official gave a full-throated endorsement of former President Donald Trump, but drew immediate scorn over her comment Tuesday night that Republicans need to vote for the MAGA leader — a convicted felon — because the party puts criminals "where they belong: in jail."

Brenna Bird, the attorney general in her state, spoke Tuesday night and blasted "defund the police" Democrats like President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris for making "life miserable for law enforcement."

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'Compare it to the Kremlin': CNN's Chris Wallace nails RNC crowd's reaction to Trump

CNN anchor Chris Wallace said he couldn't help but notice that the crowd at the Republican National Convention was similar to Russian President Vladimir Putin's sycophants.

During Tuesday night's convention broadcast, CNN correspondent Phil Mattingly reported that the crowd followed Trump's lead on when to stand and sit.

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'Back the blue! Back the blue!' Trump roots for police despite history of stiffing them

As the crowd of delegates chanted “Back the blue! Back the blue!” on Tuesday, former President Donald Trump flashed a thumbs up at Republican National Convention speaker Randy Sutton, a retired law enforcement officer who founded a nonprofit benefiting wounded cops.

Trump, the Republican nominee for president, has leaned heavily into his public support of the police recently.

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'Melania plays the long game': Analyst warns Trump's wife's absence is 'calculated'

Former First Lady Melania Trump continues to be largely absent as her husband tries to claw his way back into the White House — and it is by design, wrote Mary Jordan for The Washington Post.

But not, as is commonly assumed, because she has lost her loyalty to a husband who was convicted of falsifying hush payments to an adult film star he slept with early in their marriage.

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'Pathetic': Nikki Haley slammed for 'unprincipled groveling' to Trump at RNC

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R-SC) put aside months of bitter primary fighting, and her own extensive criticisms that he is unfit to lead, to endorse former President Donald Trump at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee Tuesday.

Commenters on social media were revolted — including some conservatives who had once respected her.

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