Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Trump News

How jurors will be selected in Trump’s legal cases — a criminal law expert explains

Every defendant is entitled to a fair and impartial jury.

But the process to find one can be long and taxing, particularly in a high-profile trial such as the one in New York, in which Donald Trump stands accused of fraud in his efforts to cover up his relationship with porn star Stormy Daniels by paying her US$130,000 in hush money.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump team considers Hail Mary plan to avoid hush-money felony conviction: report

Donald Trump's legal team is considering asking jurors to consider misdemeanor crimes as a way to avoid a likely felony conviction in the hush money trial set to start in Manhattan Monday, according to a report.

A Trump team insider told Politico that his lawyers are floating the option as they see acquittal in the trial as increasingly unlikely.

Keep reading... Show less

'That's a lie': GOP strategist whacks Trump's attempted abortion pivot

A Republican strategist on Thursday called out former President Donald Trump for trying to pivot on abortion even though the Supreme Court justices he appointed were the ones who threw reproductive rights laws into chaos by overturning Roe v. Wade.

Appearing on CNN, GOP strategist Rina Shah whacked Trump for pledging that the 1864 abortion law now on the books in Arizona would get "fixed" without specifying how that would happen.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's legal woes and his risky bet they will help his campaign

Donald Trump has turned being a victim into a central plank of his campaign, an electoral strategy that will be put to the test Monday in Manhattan during the first ever criminal trial of a former US president.

The 77-year-old Republican candidate has repeatedly denounced the numerous legal actions against him as political witch hunts brought by Democrats to derail his chances of recapturing the White House in November.

Keep reading... Show less

The porn star, the president and a 'hush money' payment

Real estate tycoon and reality television star Donald Trump and Stormy Daniels, an X-rated film actress, were both at a celebrity golf tournament at Lake Tahoe in July 2006.

That much is not in dispute.

Keep reading... Show less

Why Trump doesn't get to say Arizona 'went too far' on abortion

One progressive lawmaker complained of "whiplash" Wednesday as presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump attempted to distance himself—and his own stated abortion policy proposals—from the Arizona Supreme Court's reinstatement of a 160-year-old abortion ban.

A day after the high court upheld a ban on abortion care from the moment of conception, with no exceptions for pregnancies that result from rape or incest, the former president agreed with a reporter that the state had gone "too far" and that abortion law in Arizona will "be straightened out."

Keep reading... Show less

'One of the biggest spenders': Former Trump aide blames ex-president for current inflation

Donald Trump was one of the biggest spending presidents of all time, and he helped cause the current inflation numbers, according to a former official from his administration on Wednesday.

Former Homeland Security official Miles Taylor, who has claimed his home was targeted by a break-in shortly after he published a scathing "Anonymous" op-ed about Trump's presidency, Wednesday evening appeared on MSNBC's The 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle. He was asked about the revisionist history of Trump and the GOP.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's Homeland Security advisor calls ex-president's latest claim 'complete nonsense'

Donald Trump's former Homeland Security advisor Tom Bossert had some harsh words for his former boss.

Trump earlier in the day lashed out against a statute he supported as president. Specifically, the former president Wednesday directed House Republicans to "kill" a legislative effort he mistook for another statute, according to a Fox News reporter.

Keep reading... Show less

'Wow': CNN host stunned by former Trump advisor's answer on who he is voting for

Former Trump national security adviser John Bolton divulged who he wrote in as his president back in 2020 and who he plans on voting for come November 5. And they're both the same person.

During an appearance on CNN's "The Source," host Kaitlan Collins asked Bolton directly who the steadfast Republican voted for if, as he's claimed, he didn't vote for former President Donald Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

'He plans to do it again': MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace pushes back against Trump admin advisor

Former Trump national security advisor John Bolton tangoed with MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace over his belief that whatever swamp draining Trump did to disrupt the country's institutions during his term in office — it didn't ruin or undo them.

"I do not believe that Trump represents an existential threat to democracy," Bolton told her. "And I think that probably puts me at a minority on this network."

Keep reading... Show less

'This is a failure': James Comer asked by conservative radio host to defend impeachment

House Oversight Committee chair James Comer (R-KY) got an earful on Fox News Radio when conservative analyst Guy Benson asked him to defend against accusations from the media on how the impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden appears to be going nowhere.

Comer did his best to defend the work his committee had done — but was light on hard details or accomplishments.

Keep reading... Show less

'The best people': Trump drowned in mockery after his lawyers subpoena the wrong person

Former President Donald Trump's efforts to prepare for his New York hush money trial in a few days have hit a humiliating snag, as his attorneys tried to subpoena former D.A. investigator Jeremy Rosenberg — and accidentally brought in a different person with the same name.

The bemused Rosenberg told Trump's legal team "I don't have any files for you," and added, "I'm keeping the fifteen dollars" of witness travel expenses.

Keep reading... Show less

'I genuinely don’t know': House Republicans confused about bill after chaotic meeting

Journalist Michael Tomasky warned in a January op-ed "that nothing productive or beneficial will come from the GOP majority that is taking over the House."

ABC News reported during the same month that "the 118th Congress is on track to being one of the least functional sessions ever, with only 34 bills passed since January of last year."

Keep reading... Show less