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Mike Lindell $5 million voter fraud challenger wants to use reward to restore voting trust

He debunked MyPillow's Mike Lindell's $5 million challenge and now a federal judge is paving the way for him to collect the prize.

Robert Zeidman, a Nevada-based computer forensics expert who happened to vote for former President Donald Trump, produced a 15-page report to prove false Lindell's supposed evidence that the Chinese interfered with meddling with the voting machines in the 2020 election.

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Ex-GOP strategist warns Alina Habba she could be the next Mike Lindell

Trump fealty is costing many in his orbit plenty and they should serve as cautionary tales.

That's according to political consultant Tim Miller who fears some of former President Donald Trump's latest yes-people could follow down an expensive path that folks like Rudy Giuliani and Mike Lindell know all too well.

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'They are trying to empower government': Ex-GOP lawmaker blows up 'irony' of the far-right

The evangelical movement that has so thoroughly overtaken the Republican Party has a philosophy that spits in the face of everything the party was meant to stand for about the role of government in private life, former Rep. David Jolly (R-FL) told MSNBC's Joy Reid on Thursday.

This comes after Alabama Chief Justice Tom Parker, who helped architect the state's controversial ruling that frozen embryos are children and jeopardized access to in vitro fertilization care throughout the state, was revealed to have expressed support for the so-called "Seven Mountains Mandate" in conversation with a Christian nationalist activist.

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Trump's GOP rival says ex-president's 'fingerprints' are 'all over' party's failure

Former President Donald Trump is responsible for the Republican Party's long string of failures, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley told CNN's Jake Tapper on Thursday.

Haley, who is the final remaining Republican candidate opposing Trump for the nomination, warned that the GOP needs a new direction to avoid sliding further into disaster — and this is reflected throughout the party leadership.

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Stephen Miller loses big in racially-charged lawsuit to restrict voting in Arizona

Former President Donald Trump associate Stephen Miller just lost big in a case where he sought to restrict voting in Arizona.

In Strong Communities of Arizona v. Maricopa County, filed earlier this month, Miller argued that the largest county in Arizona, home to Phoenix, illegally placed too many voting centers around Black and Hispanic neighborhoods, thereby putting white and indigenous voters in other parts of the county at a disadvantage for voting access. According to Democracy Docket, the voting rights group headed by liberal attorney Marc Elias, Miller also claimed Maricopa County officials "violated numerous state laws and regulations concerning chain of custody procedures, ballot reconciliation, signature verification, ballot curing, voter registration cancellations and drop boxes."

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Trump co-defendant Carlos De Oliveira seeks dismissal from docs case: court filing

Mar-a-Lago property manager Carlos De Oliveira, who was indicted alongside former president Donald Trump in special counsel Jack Smith's classified documents case, is seeking to dismiss the counts against him.

Hugo Lowell, political investigations reporter for The Guardian, flagged the court filing on social media.

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Legal analyst predicts why Supreme Court Trump immunity ruling is taking so long

Why has the Supreme Court not yet issued a ruling on former President Donald Trump's presidential immunity claim? MSNBC legal expert Lisa Rubin gave a potential reason why on Thursday evening.

The Supreme Court must decide whether to stay the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals decision, which ruled Trump is not immune from prosecution in his federal election interference case, and whether to review the decision, Rubin noted.

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'It's terrifying': Trump critics plan to flee the U.S. if he's reelected and seeks revenge

Americans who have run afoul of former President Donald Trump are making plans to flee the country should he be reelected and seek revenge, according to a new report.

NBC News spoke with more than a dozen people who’ve testified against Trump, written books decrying his policies, or fled his administration — and are now faced with his potential return to power.

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Jan. 6 rioter begging for court leniency says she 'did not even vote for' Trump

For Jessica Reyher Jan. 6, 2021, was a "devastating day" and one where she and others "went too far."

In a letter to the judge set to sentence her next week for taking a plea to a felony offense of civil disorder, the 38-year-old expressed her regrets to what transpired on that day, and admitted that she didn't cast a vote for former President Donald Trump.

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'Deaf ears': GOP strategist warns his party's 2024 tactic is going to backfire

Republicans have adopted a strategy for 2024 that focuses on President Joe Biden's advanced age and gaffes to the press. But according to a Republican strategist, that strategy will backfire.

In an op-ed this Thursday, Alex Conant contends that Republicans are sorely mistaken if they think voters "will not reelect a geriatric politician."

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'Bigger losses for the GOP': Ex-official says Trump's new plan will 'bankrupt' Republicans

Former Homeland Security chief of staff Miles Taylor is sounding the alarm against Donald Trump's plans for taking over the Republican Party and installing his own family member, Lara Trump, as head.

Speaking to the press, Lara Trump said that the Republican Party should be paying the former president's legal bills as evidenced by the enthusiasm of a GoFundMe started for the self-described billionaire after he was handed a $355 million judgment in the fraud trial.

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GOP 'increasingly alarmed' by 'dysfunction, debt, and disarray' in state parties: report

Republican officials are growing frustrated and worried about a series of disasters unfolding in party chapters at the state level in battlegrounds across the country.

According to The New York Times' Shane Goldmacher and Nick Corasaniti, "State Republican parties in roughly half of the most important battleground states are awash in various degrees of dysfunction, debt and disarray," and "A top lawyer for House Republicans wrote an unusually acidic letter last month to the Michigan state party, accusing party officials of 'inexplicably' squandering the $263,000 they had been given by the campaign arm of House Republicans on 'exorbitant' and unnecessary expenses that would do almost nothing to help Republicans keep hold of the House," and adding, "We are growing increasingly alarmed."

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