Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Trump News

GOP 'salivating' to ram through another corporate tax giveaway if Trump wins

The crowning legislative achievement of Donald Trump's first term in the White House was the passage of an unpopular tax bill that gave big corporations a massive windfall, disproportionately rewarded wealthy individuals despite being pitched as a boon for workers, and contributed trillions to the national debt.

With Trump running for another four years in power this November, Republicans are gearing up for a repeat.

Keep reading... Show less

These Republicans don’t believe Trump was indicted – but say he’s not guilty

Donald Trump has been indicted on dozens of criminal felony charges, and yet a combination of approximately two-thirds of Republicans are either unsure that the ex-president was indicted on certain charges, or disagree that he was. They also say he’s not guilty.

Guilt or innocence aside, given that Trump himself and the news media frequently talk about the indictments, about the cases, about the judges, the prosecutors, and the evidence, it is a stunning revelation.

Keep reading... Show less

'Shame': Sam Alito's wife caught on tape whining about Pride flags

Supreme Court Justice Sam Alito's wife thinks she deserves a prize because she has to look at Pride flags, newly uncovered tape reveals.

Martha-Ann Alito — who threw her husband into national scandal by waving a "Stop the Steal" flag after Jan. 6, 2021 — made this comment on audio revealed Monday by Rolling Stone.

Keep reading... Show less

'Slow-moving scandal': MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace slams Fox for ducking Trump rally reports

The Fox networks once broadcast Donald Trump's speeches live, but it has been a while since the ex-president graced the airwaves in anything that wasn't edited by the network.

MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace began her show Monday with a clip of some of the confusing statements the ex-president made during his Sunday Las Vegas rally.

Keep reading... Show less

Exposé shares bizarre stories about Trump-backed governor hopeful

Bizarre stories involving a top Republican candidate up for election as governor in 2024 have been revealed in an expose published Monday.

New York Magazine has a new report on North Carolina candidate Mark Robinson, in which he's described as having no real government experience but has some odd obsessions.

Keep reading... Show less

'Peak boomerism': House GOP trolled for odd Cheesecake Factory rant

House Judiciary Committee Republicans are mad as hell about cheesecake and they're not going to take it anymore.

This is the message delivered in an odd X post Monday afternoon bemoaning New York City's plight under President Joe Biden's administration.

Keep reading... Show less

Scandal-laden Brazilian slaughterhouse billionaires tricked Trump into deadly policy: book

A 60-year-old grandmother died without ever meeting her only grandchild after contracting COVID-19 in a slaughterhouse former President Donald Trump ordered to remain open at the behest of scandal-laden Brazilian billionaire backers who misled his administration, according to a new report.

Tin Aye's death was one of hundreds the Trump administration "sacrificed" to protect meat monopolies pursuing billions in profits amid a global pandemic that claimed 7 million lives, author Peter S. Goodman argues in his new book "How the World Ran Out of Everything."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump rushes to help embattled Nancy Mace as members of her own staff seek to bury her

Former President Donald Trump spoke out on his Truth Social account on Monday to endorse a number of Republican politicians — with the backing of one in particular standing out.

"It is my great honor to Endorse a Strong Conservative Voice for South Carolina’s 1st Congressional District," wrote Trump. "Nancy Mace worked hard campaigning across South Carolina in support of our Record-Breaking WIN. In Congress, she is fighting to Secure the Border, Strengthen our Military, Support our Veterans, Uphold the Rule of Law, Stop Political Weaponization, and Protect and Defend our always under siege Second Amendment."

Keep reading... Show less

Steve Bannon predicts his final appeals will fail: 'On July 1, I'll be in federal prison'

Steve Bannon, a former Trump strategist, conceded that his final appeals before reporting to prison were likely to fail.

During an interview on Monday, conspiracy theorist Alex Jones asked Bannon if he would be successful in blocking a federal judge's order that he must report to prison on July 1 for contempt of Congress.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump Media stocks tumble as new auditor amends filing from firm accused of fraud: report

Trump media stocks tumbled Monday after an accounting firm, stepping in to replace a previous auditor accused of "massive fraud," submitted a new report on the company's finances, CNBC reports.

Former President Donald Trump's eponymous company saw prices dip 7 percent after the company announced it delivered an updated report to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, according to the report and SEC filings.

Keep reading... Show less

'I really can't be fact-checked': Alina Habba doubles down on bizarre childhood claim

Alina Habba, Donald Trump's attorney and spokeswoman, doubled down on a previous claim that she had to "survive" on peanuts and Coca-Cola as a child.

Habba's remarks went viral over the weekend after she told the story at Turning Point USA's Young Women's Leadership Summit.

Keep reading... Show less

'Surprise move' by prosecutors at end of Trump trial salvaged conviction: expert

A Boston University law professor who admitted that he was skeptical prosecutors from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office could bring their case against Donald Trump to a successful conclusion stated that a tactical change near the end of the trial sealed the deal with the jury.

In a column for Slate, legal expert Jed Shugerman started by stating he had been a "vocal critic" of the way the charges had initially been presented as part of the 34 felony count indictment.

He was concerned about the prosecution relying on 34 internal documents that the public had no knowledge, he wrote, and how the lawyers would show they'd been used to defraud the public— a central reason for bringing the case to trial.

Shugerman referred to his criticism from last year when he wrote in the New York Times, "If a business record is internal, it is not obvious how a false filing could play a role in defrauding if other entities likely would not rely upon it and be deceived by it.

"Even if one can argue that the statute should apply to internal records, this is not the ideal time to test a seemingly novel (or even a very rare) application.”

At that time he called the Trump indictment a "national embarrassment."

In a postmortem on the trial, he wrote, "But in a surprise move at the end of the trial, the prosecutors restructured the case."

"The statute in question, New York Election Law 17-152, states: 'Any two or more persons who conspire to promote or prevent the election of any person to a public office by unlawful means and which conspiracy is acted upon by one or more of the parties thereto, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,'" he explained before elaborating, "The other crimes that had previously been possible underlying crimes for the falsifying documents charges — the alleged Federal Election Campaign Act violations, secondary false document filings, and tax crimes — were now the possible 'unlawful means' of 'promoting a candidate.' The previous approach had three steps. The end of the trial focused on a fourth step, proving 'unlawful means.'"

Pointing out "This strategy worked with the jury," he continued, "Did Trump intend for these 2017 documents to be a 'means' to win in the 2020 election? The question is whether reasonable people could have come to that conclusion."

Keep reading... Show less

'Exactly how it’s done': Biden mocks Trump using the ex-president's own words

President Joe Biden's newest campaign message was delivered by his political foe in a rambling rally speech that saw the convicted felon, former president and presumptive nominee tell voters, "I don't care about you."

Biden took to X Monday morning to share a video clip of Donald Trump making this bold statement during a Las Vegas rally on Sunday.

Keep reading... Show less