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Alina Habba's days could be numbered after 'inexcusable' trial blunders: former prosecutor

Former President Donald Trump is looking at new law firms to represent him in an appeal of the E. Jean Carroll verdict — and that is potentially bad news for his existing attorney who argued the case originally, Alina Habba, said former federal prosecutor Elie Honig on CNN's "The Lead" Wednesday.

Habba's courtroom antics led to constant clashes with Judge Lewis Kaplan, and ultimately the jury ordered Trump to pay $83.3 million in damages over defamatory claims that Carroll lied about her rape accusation to sell books.

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'How to shut Trump up': Expert explains why ex-president finally stopped defaming Carroll

E. Jean Carroll this week has been living the dream of many Americans facing a contentious presidential election year ahead. As former D.C. prosecutor Glenn Kirschner puts it, Carroll has managed “to shut Donald Trump up.”

Kirschner addressed viewers on his YouTube show “Justice Matters” Wednesday to note a significant development following the New York jury ruling ordering Trump to pay $83.3 million in defamation damages and penalties.

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Trump's campaign advisor warns GOP donors not to take his words 'too seriously': report

Give with your heart, not your ears.

Susie Wiles, a top GOP adviser to former President Donald Trump's third bid for the White House, made such a pitch to deep-pocketed mega donors at a ritzy and hush-hush mixer at Palm Beach, Florida's Four Seasons on Tuesday, according to CNBC. It reported she told people not to take the ex-president's words too seriously.

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'Perilously wrong': Ex-Trump ally buries former boss for belief he has sway over dictators

When John Bolton joined the Trump administration as national security adviser in 2018, he thought the responsibilities of the highest government job in the land would tame then-President Donald Trump. In an op-ed for The Wall Street Journal Wednesday, he admits he was wrong.

"Mr. Trump’s only consistent focus is on himself. He invariably equated good personal relations with foreign leaders to good relations between countries. Personal relations are important, but the notion that they sway Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping and their ilk is perilously wrong," Bolton writes.

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'He's an aberration': Former ally says Trump is just a short-term blip for GOP

Former White House National Security Adviser John Bolton says that Donald Trump's influence over the Republican Party will be short-lived.

Since leaving the Trump administration, Bolton has become one of its most vocal critics. Speaking to Newsweek this Wednesday, he said that "many in Congress are intimidated by [Trump]."

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Trump may tap son-in-law Jared Kushner for Secretary of State in a second term: report

Former President Donald Trump could tap his son-in-law Jared Kushner as Secretary of State if he wins another term, reported Vanity Fair on Wednesday.

"According to two sources, prominent Republicans are speculating that Kushner is in the running to take charge at Foggy Bottom if Trump wins in November," reported Gabriel Sherman. "One source briefed on the conversations said Republican senators have privately asked Kushner to head up the agency." Sources also said that Kushner, who walked away from politics to work in investment, will take until late summer to make his decision.

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Trump spokesperson claims he will follow 'real Constitution' to secure border

A spokesperson for Donald Trump insisted that the former president secured the U.S. border during his term in office because he follows the "real Constitution."

During a Wednesday interview on Real America's Voice, Liz Harrington claimed the U.S. border had been secured during Trump's tenure because the former president "took his oaths very seriously."

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'What penalties?' Trump confused when asked about campaign funds to pay E. Jean Carroll

Donald Trump on Wednesday dodged a question about whether he would use campaign funds to pay the more-than-$80 million jury award for columnist E. Jean Carroll, instead asking, "What penalties?"

The former president was asked about using his political operation's money to pay the debt in that case as well as the civil fraud suit, but he appeared totally confused. Instead of replying, he asked about the penalties. When the reporter clarified, Trump appeared to still not understand, because he began ranting only about the civil fraud penalties he is expecting any minute from Judge Engoron in New York.

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'Losing the battle but winning the war': Legal analysts on Trump's immunity court delay

It has been over a month since the Washington, D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals began deliberating Donald Trump's claims that he should have "presidential immunity" from criminal charges.

And a Politico report Wednesday said Trump is the one benefitting from the court's delay.

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Trump's 'living in fairyland' if he thinks he's not getting convicted: conservative pundit

Donald Trump is "living in fairyland" if he thinks he can escape conviction in all of his criminal cases, a conservative cable news pundit pointed out Wednesday.

Host John Roberts noted during a panel discussion on Fox News that a Trump conviction "could really swing people's preferences in terms of who they vote for for president."

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'God's kingdom': Expert warns 'spiritual warfare' waged for Trump cannot be laughed off

The far-right Christian Donald Trump supporters who believe in demonic possession, rapture and spiritual warfare could wreak havoc in the temporal world if their leader is reelected, a theological expert warned Wednesday.

Concordia University professor André Gagné, author of "American Evangelicals for Trump: Dominion, Spiritual Warfare, and the End Times," spoke with Salon and raised serious concerns about the evangelicals who believe the former president will usher in “god’s kingdom” on Earth.

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Allegations against Trump prosecutor could be enough to dismiss case: lawyer

The extramarital affair allegations involving Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis actually could result in the dismissal of Georgia racketeering charges against Donald Trump, according to a conservative legal analyst.

Willis is accused of engaging in a romantic relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade, who was married at the time but is now going through a bitter divorce, and conservative attorney Phil Holloway explained how the district attorney's actions could end the case against Trump, reported Newsweek.

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Bikers for Trump just hit a ditch

Bikers for Trump, the group Donald Trump once bragged would get “tough” on his political enemies, is looking weak on its balance sheet.

Very.

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