Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Trump News

State GOP chairs 'not happy' about Trump's RNC takeover but fear the 'MAGA nuts': insider

Donald Trump's taking control of the Republican National Committee is not going over well with Republican leadership at the state level who fear they will be left out in the cold with the RNC becoming a defacto arm of his re-election bid.

According to former RNC chair Michael Steele, the only thing stopping a revolt at the state level is the fear of Trump's hardcore MAGA loyalists.

During an explanation of how the RNC works on MSNBC's "The Weekend," Steele first added the caveat that when he took over the committee he also fired everyone but it also wasn't a mere seven months before a crucial election.

ALSO READ: Trump campaign hit with new warning about taking illegal donations

Having said that, he noted that the RNC's usual function is to work on the eight key battleground states that can swing an election.

Now, he stated, help may not be on the way because the RNC may be funneling scarce cash to pay for the former president's myriad legal problems.

He then added that he was hearing grumbling from his former associates heading up their respective state Republican parties.

"I have talked to a number of former and current state party chairs and they are not happy," he told his co-hosts. "They will put on the face because they don't want to get the blowback from the MAGA nuts inside the party. But the reality is that they are not happy."

"They know what this means," he continued. "People that have been in the process of building up and putting in place players who are going to actually execute on a plan, 'Oh, I guess there is one,' but Lara Trump is now in charge."

Watch below or at the link.

Keep reading... Show less

House GOP caucus 'completely demoralized' after Biden impeachment faceplant: journalist

The hosts of MSNBC's "The Weekend" had a good laugh on Saturday morning as Atlantic reporter McKay Coppins described the dysfunction of the House Republican caucus that is now reeling as their attempt to impeach President Joe Biden is dying a slow death.

With Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) no longer interested in putting impeachment to a vote in the House, Oversight Chair James Comer (R-KY) plans instead to make criminal referrals to the DOJ which are also expected to go nowhere.

Asked how House Republicans are dealing with the months of hearings that have fallen apart, Coppins stated that their mood is dark and getting darker.

ALSO READ: Marjorie Taylor Greene gets fresh scrutiny from regulators after election violation fine

Reacting to a letter the White House sent to Johnson essentially taunting the failure of the investigation, Coppins explained, " I think the White House smelled blood in the water, right? They saw Republicans were losing their will to continue with this."

"I mean, you talk to Republicans on the Hill and they know that this is over, right?" he continued. "A lot of them knew it was a farce from the beginning but they were going along and saying what we can we dredge up? It was a fishing expedition on how to hurt President Biden during an election year but their star witness has fallen apart."

"To say the least," a laughing Symone Sanders-Townsend interjected.

"The impeachment has fallen apart in pretty embarrassing fashion," Coppins added. "That's why you see people like Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO) just kind of completely demoralized. By all accounts, the [GOP] House conference was especially demoralized and embarrassed. You see Republicans wanting to retire and leave. I think the White House saw that."

Watch below or at the link.

Keep reading... Show less

FBI agent furious over MAL search thought Trump would return classified docs if just asked

Emails sent to an FBI ombudsman by anonymous employees of the Bureau offer a stunning look inside the culture of the nation's top domestic intelligence, security, and law enforcement agency charged with investigating federal crimes.

After the FBI's execution of a lawful search warrant on Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort and residence in 2022, some Bureau employees bitterly complained to the ombudsman, who forwarded their anonymous comments to the Bureau's top brass.

Keep reading... Show less

'You were very hard on him': Nancy Mace pressed by Bill Maher on her anti-Trump quotes

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) on Friday was asked on Real Time with Bill Maher about how she can support Donald Trump after calling for accountability for the ex-president after Jan. 6.

Appearing alongside U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), Mace took to Maher's show less than a week after she made headlines in a confrontational interview about rape and Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

'Corrupt': Jared Kushner’s overseas business deals under fire as Trump runs for president

Former President Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner (who was also a senior adviser in his White House) has been ramping up his overseas business dealings undeterred by the optics of doing so in the midst of his father-in-law's presidential campaign.

A Friday report in the New York Times scrutinized Kushner's real estate deals in Balkan countries of Albania and Serbia, in which he stands to reap significant financial benefits once they're completed. The Times reported that Kushner has been working with Richard Grenell, who was Trump's former acting Director of National Intelligence who also served as German ambassador and a special envoy to the Balkans.

Keep reading... Show less

'Kleptocracy': Red flag raised Trump is putting America on the path to dictatorship

Trump cozying up to the steely Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and revering Russia's Vladimir Putin are the tell-tale signs of a democracy-deficient direction he'd like to take the country.

This week former president Donald Trump broke bread with Orbán and suggested he could end the Russian-Ukranian war by preventing even a "single penny" be allotted to fight the invasion.

Keep reading... Show less

'There's something different': Reporter stunned by changes in 'age-impaired' Trump

The vision for Trump's America is a "dystopian hellscape."

That was New Yorker's Susan Glasser's takeaway after watching Trump hold court with his MAGA supporters at a rally in Rome, Georgia after clinching the Republican delegates needed for the GOP's presidential 2024 nomination.

Keep reading... Show less

'Tucker lying for attention': GOP lawmaker feuds with ex-Fox News host

Conservative media host Tucker Carlson was under fire on Friday after he attacked a Republican lawmaker for voting in favor of a bill that would encourage TikTok to divest from its Chinese ownership.

Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) voted in support of the bill, after which Carlson said, "This is Rep. Dan Crenshaw as he walks out of the Capitol after voting to give Joe Biden the power to shut down news sites that dare to challenge him." Crenshaw evaluated the evidence instead of making any announcement in public.

Keep reading... Show less

Peter Navarro begs SCOTUS for Get Out Of Jail Free card: court records

Peter Navarro wants the Supreme Court to hand him a Get Out Of Jail Free card, court records show.

Navarro, former President Donald Trump's onetime trade adviser, filed Friday an emergency application to stay his four-month sentence on misdemeanor criminal contempt of Congress charges he hopes to appeal.

Keep reading... Show less

Fox News host says 'sorry' for showing wrong Black lawyer instead of Nathan Wade

Laura Ingraham made a mea culpa on Friday night for her program "The Ingraham Angle" blundering a graphic supposed to feature Fulton County DA Fani Willis next to her now resigned special prosecutor Nathan Wade.

The graphic shown during her monologue included attorney Terrence Bradley, who had served as Wade's divorce attorney and a partner in his private practice.

Keep reading... Show less

'A huge deal': Ex-GOP staffer says recent Trump repudiation might tip the scales for Biden

Trump losing the confidence of his first veep in Mike Pence could be a bellwether moment.

"It should come as no surprise that I will not be endorsing Donald Trump this year," Pence said on Fox News' "The Story."

Keep reading... Show less

'Lost control': Ex-prosecutor slams judge in Trump case for 'taking shots' at Fani Willis

Judge McAfee is "losing control," according to one former prosecutor.

McAfee, the jurist overseeing the case in which Fani Willis is prosecuting Donald Trump for allegedly attempting to subvert the 2020 election, on Friday ruled that Willis couldn't keep her former boyfriend, Nathan Wade,- on the high-profile case. McAfee has been under a steady assault from conservatives who think Willis should already have been booted.

Keep reading... Show less

'That's not a finding!' CNN experts battle it out over judge's Fani Willis order

The Georgia judge delivered several setbacks for Fulton County DA Fani Willis this week.

He nixed six of the 41 counts filed in sprawling RICO election subversion case against Trump and co-defendants, made an ultimatum that either Willis or her ex-romantic flame Nathan Wade step down from the case (Wade formally withdrew) — and then suggested their testimonies under oath to defend against misconduct weren't completely on the level.

Keep reading... Show less