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Nathan Wade should step down from Georgia Trump case even if not disqualified: experts

Special prosecutor Nathan Wade — who admitted on the witness stand last week to dating Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis — should recuse himself from the prosecution of former President Donald Trump and his associates to preserve the integrity of the investigation, according to a recent column by two legal experts.

In the legal publication Lawfare, lawyer Anna Bower and editor-in-chief Benjamin Wittes both argued that while there is no basis to disqualify Willis based on the evidence brought by an attorney representing one of Trump's co-defendants, the lingering questions surrounding Wade and his relationship with Willis are a distraction from the historic and unprecedented RICO prosecution of the former president.

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Oops! CNN reporter accidentally swears on air as she quotes White House officials on Trump

A CNN reporter seems to have accurately quoted her White House sources by accident — and blurted out a swear word on live television.

Senior White House correspondent MJ Lee reported Tuesday that President Joe Biden had personally directed senior campaign aids to focus more aggressively on the "crazy s--t" Donald Trump says in public, according to sources.

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Judge threatens ex-Trump aide Peter Navarro with contempt over presidential documents

U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly threatened Tuesday to hold Peter Navarro in contempt of court after he refused to turn over government records.

In a 6-page order, the Clinton-appointed judge hit Navarro for failing to return presidential records after a March 9 ruling said that he must turn them over.

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The View mocks Trump fans buying 'tacky sneakers': 'Same people who complain about gas'

"The View" co-host Joy Behar mocked Donald Trump's fans for shelling out $400 for his sneakers while complaining about gas prices.

The former president unveiled shiny gold sneakers with "45" emblazoned on the side and uppers that resemble American flags, and panelists on "The View" found them ridiculous-looking and overpriced.

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Election deniers drop steal claims from 2024 campaigns: 'That message didn't work'

A sizable number of Republicans who made false claims about the 2020 election results are running for office again in 2024 — but this time around, the 17 candidates are toning down their election denial rhetoric and not making it the center of their campaign messages the way they did in previous elections.

Now they're focusing on themes like "election security" and "election integrity."

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'MAGA carnival': Here's who'll join Trump at this week's CPAC

Donald Trump and a host of Republican politicians, right-wing media celebrities, foreign leaders and conspiracy theorists are set to appear this week at the Conservative Political Action Conference.

Rumored Trump running mate frontrunners Rep. Elise Stefanik (NY), Arizona Senate hopeful Kari Lake, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem and Sen. J.D. Vance (OH) will all speak at the event, held at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland. And they'll be joined by Sen. Tommy Tuberville (AL), Reps. Jim Jordan (OH) and Matt Gaetz (FL), and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell.

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Fraud verdict is a 'sideshow' distracting 'hope peddlers' from Trump's real crime: writer

In the wake of civil judgments against him totaling almost half a billion dollars, Donald Trump will need to raise much more money from his followers to pay off the fines, columnist Chauncey DeVega wrote Tuesday — adding that a recent fundraising email sent out by Trump conflates his being punished for his behavior with an attack on his followers.

"The unfortunate reality is that Friday’s $355 million judgment against Donald Trump (and the E. Jean Carroll verdict for more than 80 million dollars before that), as well as his still upcoming criminal and civil trials, will only serve to fuel his followers’ fantasies of persecution — which means they will further embrace even more political violence, terrorism, and thuggery as necessary means of self-preservation," DeVega writes in Salon.

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Alina Habba confused after Newsmax host says her 'reputation' could suffer over Trump

Attorney Alina Habba doesn't worry about her reputation being harmed by representing former president Donald Trump.

Following a devastating judgment against her client in a New York fraud case, Habba was asked about her newfound celebrity in a Tuesday interview on Newsmax.

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Trump warned that outbursts and lawyer games will be 'shut down' at hush money trial

Donald Trump may have to be on better behavior at his upcoming criminal fraud trial than he was at the civil fraud case that cost him $354 million.

The former president is scheduled to stand trial starting March 25 in Manhattan on 34 counts of fraud, falsifying business records and intent to conceal another crime, including state and federal election laws, as part of his hush money payoff to adult movie actress Stormy Daniels.

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Supreme Court declines to lift sanctions from lawyers for frivolous election lawsuits

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to lift sanctions against attorneys Sidney Powell and Lin Wood after they challenged Donald Trump's loss in Michigan's 2020 presidential election.

In separate appeals, the two pro-Trump attorneys asked the court to revisit their lawsuits filed after the 2020 election. The lawsuits alleged an election conspiracy that they said was connected to China and Venezuela.

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Trump's fury at Snoop Dogg set off 'chaos' in final hours of his presidency: report

Donald Trump was consumed by anger toward Snoop Dogg in the final days of his presidency, according to numerous sources.

The rapper and actor worked behind the scenes in late 2020 and early 2021 seeking executive clemency for his friend and Death Row Records co-founder Michael “Harry-O” Harris and other federal prisoners, but Trump reportedly couldn't get over previous insults the celebrity had hurled at him earlier in his presidency.

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'Spinning yarns': Professor blasts Dems for creating fantasy that Trump isn't winning

As the November election draws closer, President Joe Biden is in serious trouble of losing to Donald Trump — and Democrats need to stop lying to themselves and accept that reality, according to David Faris, a columnist and associate professor of political science at Roosevelt University in Chicago.

Just because people can't conceive of Trump serving another term after his first tumultuous one doesn't mean it won't happen, Faris writes, adding that "there are too many high-profile voices in Democratic circles spinning yarns about how happy days will be here again soon and that Biden is in a fantastic position."

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Trump's second-term plans 'should be scary to anybody': Former Trump official

Former Trump administration National Security Adviser John Bolton sounded the alarm about his former boss' plans for shaking up the world order in a second term on CNN Tuesday — and warned it would be destabilizing for western nations.

Bolton, a longtime neoconservative hawk, was reacting to the release of letters from now-deceased Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who himself warned about the danger from former President Donald Trump taking power again.

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