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'Going to be like The Purge tonight': Milwaukee reacts to Trump shooting

MILWAUKEE — In the hour after former President Donald Trump was apparently struck in the ear with a projectile at a rally in Pennsylvania, people preparing for the Republican National Convention in Wisconsin met the news with a mixture of shock, bewilderment and vigilance.

Michelle Altherr, a Republican National Convention delegate from Arizona, stood outside Fiserv Forum and raged: “When you think about it, you’re like, no, this just ramped up to another level. If you thought we were MAGA and extreme before, we went to another level now. When you see on the video Trump is mouthing 'fight, fight' — oh, no, he didn’t have to say it. We’re at another level.”

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'Boom-boom-boom': Trump rallygoer describes scene from front row

CBS News' Scott MacFarlane on Saturday evening posted a video on his Twitter account of a witness who was in the front row at the campaign rally in which former President Donald Trump was injured in an apparent shooting attempt.

MacFarlane caught up with Trump rallygoer Erin Autenreith, who described what it was like to see the incident occur in real time.

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'This is odd': Questions raised about Secret Service move to 'expose' Trump after shooting

The U.S. Secret Service agents who tackled Donald Trump to the ground after an apparent shooting at his rally on Saturday actually put the former president in greater harm and answers are necessary, according to Trump's former campaign aide.

Trump went down after loud pops were heard at his rally in Pennsylvania. The ex-president was escorted by security off the stage, and was seen with his ear bleeding profusely. Trump then pumped his fists as he was taken to his motorcade and removed from the premises.

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Trump shooting suspect dead: Butler County DA

The suspect who allegedly shot former President Donald Trump at a Pennsylvania campaign rally has been confirmed as dead.

The Washington Post's Meryl Kornfield reports that Butler County District Attorney Richard Goldinger has said that the suspect in the Trump shooting has been confirmed dead.

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'Suspect down' in apparent Trump shooting: report

The suspect who apparently shot former President Donald Trump has reportedly been taken "down" by law enforcement.

A law enforcement official has told The Atlantic's Tim Alberta that "the suspect is down," although there is not yet any indication of whether that means the suspect is dead or merely in custody.

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'My god': Internet melts down after 'what appears to be an assassination attempt' on Trump

Donald Trump was pumping his fists after being removed from a rally stage by Secret Service in the wake of what appeared to be a shooting that left him with a bloody ear. Social media melted down afterward.

Multiple loud noises and screams were followed by people ducking in cover at the rally in Pennsylvania. After a few seconds, Trump left the stage, with his ear bleeding profusely.

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Bleeding Trump taken away from rally stage after being hit by loud projectiles

Donald Trump on Saturday was tackled by U.S. Secret Service agents after loud pops erupted at his rally.

Multiple loud noises and screams were followed by people ducking in cover at the rally in Pennsylvania. After a few seconds, Trump left the stage, with his ear bleeding profusely. The rally did not continue.

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'Disrupt the process': Trump's Jan. 6-inspired plan to undermine election revealed

Donald Trump reportedly has a plan to undermine and challenge the 2024 presidential election, and it involves many of the same people who participated in the Jan. 6 insurrection attempt.

The New York Times reported on the plans on Saturday, even noting that the group spearheading Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation, is providing support for the GOP's efforts.

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NBC host said to have 'experienced karma in real time' after name flub during Biden report

NBC host Kristen Welker is being ridiculed online after messing up President Biden's name during a report about Biden messing up names.

Welker, who has in the past been accused of "jeopardizing democracy" with her coverage of Trump's alleged election subversion efforts, was recently reporting on how Biden flubbed some names, including that of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The president quickly corrected himself.

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'You don't have to be undercover': Reporter shows how foreign agents infiltrate Mar-a-Lago

Donald Trump is being used by foreign agents at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, and they don't even have to go undercover to do it, a New York Times investigative reporter said on Saturday.

David A. Fahrenthold, who often writes about nonprofit organizations, appeared on MSNBC over the weekend to discuss a recent Times report about Mar-a-Lago. Specifically, he and his colleagues wrote about how extremism is good for business at the resort, saying "Mar-a-Lago has transformed into a White House in exile and the nerve center for some of the most extreme elements of the party’s MAGA wing."

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'Donald hated that': Trump family member spills about story that 'gets under his skin'

A member of Donald Trump's family Saturday spilled some secrets that are said to embarrass the former president.

Mary Trump, Donald Trump's niece, recently explained how she knew that her uncle was lying when he claimed to know nothing about the Heritage Foundation's controversial Project 2025, which threatens to reshape the federal government and judiciary using the administration of the next conservative United States president.

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Billboard battles: Fight over Trump waged on Milwaukee's roads

MILWAUKEE — When visitors land at Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport, they are deluged by huge billboards for the Heritage Foundation, the Washington, D.C.-based conservative group behind the highly contentious Project 2025 "presidential transition" plan.

But the political debate over presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump and his policies immediately spill out on the roads and highways into the downtown Milwaukee, the site of the Republican National Convention.

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Republicans will regret a second Trump presidency for three major reasons: conservative

With the Republican Party set to coronate Donald Trump as the party's 2024 presidential candidate this week, conservative columnist Bret Stephens of the New York Times suggested conservatives withhold their support and see what the Democrats do now that President Joe Biden is on shaky ground with some members of his party.

In a column on Saturday, Stephens claimed a second Trump presidency portends disaster not just for the country, but for the GOP which will be saddled with a president believing he has no boundaries.

As Stephens explained, there are three major reasons the return of the ex-president to the Oval Office is a recipe for disaster, warning, "Republicans have good reason to think they’ll be back in the White House next January. Only then will the regrets set in."

According to the conservative, a resurrected Trump will "energize the left" which could lead to massive civil unrest and possibly deaths — particularly if he tries to make good on his threat of mass deportations.

ALSO READ: Give me the stuttering old man over the racist, sexist, lying fascist

Stephens painted a possible scenario by writing, "Federal agents are deployed to towns and cities to do the job, but many of them flatly refuse to participate in what feels to them like a modern-day re-enactment of the Fugitive Slave Act. They are joined by Democratic mayors and hundreds of thousands of Americans who are willing to form human chains around homes and neighborhoods to keep the agents out. But Trump doesn’t back down, and governors in red states call out the National Guard to break through the protests. Many are hurt, some are killed, and riots ensue."

Add to that, he wrote, Trump may not come into office with a mandate, leading to more congressional gridlock which will be blamed on Republicans and come back to haunt them in the 2026 midterms.

"The sorts of things that Republicans liked the most about Trump’s first term — the tax cuts of 2017, the picks for the federal bench and the Supreme Court, the almost successful effort to overturn Obamacare — would be dead on arrival if Democrats keep or take power in one chamber or the other," he predicted while also noting the ex-president will hurt down-ticket Republicans.

"Legislative paralysis alone won’t paralyze Trump. If anything, it will make him that much more dangerous," Stephens warned before bluntly stating that this time he won't have level-headed advisors like "Jim Mattis, Gary Cohn, H.R. McMaster or John Bolton" around to quash his worst instincts.

"I expect that a second Trump term will mainly be shambolic, angry, divisive, not catastrophic but profoundly corrosive," he wrote before stating, "If this is considered a conservative win, I wonder what a loss looks like. As for conservatives who have said they’d rather take their chances with a second Trump term than with a second Biden (or Harris) one, they might keep an open mind to see if the Democratic convention yields a younger, moderate, pragmatic nominee."

You can read more here.