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'I did it for my country': Giuliani justifies defaming Georgia election workers

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani on Sunday offered a justification after he was found liable for defaming two former Georgia election workers, Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman.

On his Sunday WABC radio program, Giuliani congratulated himself for a "brilliant legal move" because he recommended that then-President Donald Trump take his rigged election claims to state legislatures instead of the courts after the 2020 presidential vote.

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George Conway uses Trump’s own legal filing to mock his late-night immunity appeal

Lawyers for former President Donald Trump on Saturday filed a late-night appeal to the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals, “again trying to argue for presidential immunity,” CBS’ Scott MacFarlane reports.

Per McFarlane, “The 71-page briefing argues, ‘Under the doctrine of separated powers, neither a federal nor a state prosecutor, nor a state or federal court, may sit in judgment over a President’s official acts, which are vested in the Presidency alone.’”

"During the 234 years from 1789 to 2023, no current or former President had ever been criminally prosecuted for official acts. That unbroken tradition died this year,” the former president’s lawyers wrote in the filing.

Conservative lawyer George Conway on Sunday zeroed in on that “unbroken tradition” claim, using the language of the brief to highlight what sparked such an unprecedented reaction from the U.S. criminal justice system.


“During the 231 years from 1789 to 2020, no current or former President had ever telephoned officials in multiple states in an attempt to fraudulently alter presidential election results. That unbroken tradition died that year,” Conway wrote.

Read the full filing here.

Biden comes out ahead whether SCOTUS leaves Trump on the ballot or not: GOP strategist

In a column for MSNBC, GOP political strategist Susan Del Percio suggested that the battle to keep Donald Trump off the ballot in Colorado — and likely other states — should benefit President Joe Biden no matter which way the predominately conservative Supreme Court eventually rules.

With the nation's highest court punting the former president's appeal of the Colorado ruling back to the Court of Appeals before considering it — which is expected no matter which way they rule — Del Perico claimed Trump's ballot problems will do little to bring much-needed new voters into his camp.

Put more simply, she wrote, "it isn’t so much that the Colorado ruling is good for Trump; it just doesn’t hurt him."

With that in mind, she notes that the wavering voters that both Biden and Trump will be courting will never vote for the four-time indicted former president.

"Whatever the Supreme Court rules, the decision will tear this country apart. If Trump is allowed to be on the ballot in Colorado, half of the country will be outraged, and if Trump is barred from being on the ballot, the other half of the country with be irate," she predicted. "Either way, millions of Americans will view this decision as an attack on democracy. Trump voters will remain just as loyal and motivated as before. However, with the issue of democracy front and center, Biden can once again run on protecting the republic."

ALSO READ: Trolling, erotica, vulgarity: Trump, Biden Facebook pages are unmitigated trash heaps

According to Del Percio, a Trump win at the Supreme Court will be a wake-up call to voters that they can't depend on the courts to keep Trump from being elected again and it will be up to them.

"The Biden campaign has been looking for an opportunity to engage and motivate his 2020 voters, and democracy is it," she wrote before adding, "The Supreme Court’s decision will reignite the voters that Biden so desperately needs. So which candidate are these decisions good for? In the long run, it is Biden."

You can read more here.

'They've gone deep': Jack Smith has 'sprawling' evidence against Trump, CBS discovers

CBS correspondent Robert Costa said his sources revealed that special counsel Jack Smith has a more "sprawling" case against Donald Trump than previously thought.

Costa reacted to news that the Supreme Court had given Trump a minor win by refusing Smith's petition to decide on the former president's immunity claims immediately.

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Frustrated GOPers fear Biden impeachment plans have them painted into a corner

With lawmakers slated to return to Washington, D.C. after the holidays, there is growing concern among some Republican House members that the Joe Biden impeachment inquiry being led by Reps. James Comer (R-KY) and Jim Jordan (R-OH) has become a "trap" the party can't escape from now that hearings are being scheduled.

According to a report from Politico's Jordain Carney, there are more than a few GOP House members who feel there is nowhere near enough evidence to successfully send the Biden impeachment to the Democratic-controlled Senate for a trial and that Republicans will pay for their lack of success with voters.

With Politico's Carney writing, "A GOP failure to follow suit [impeaching Biden] this time would likely mean severe backlash from the right flank, former President Donald Trump and an increasingly restless base who, some Republicans acknowledge, treat impeachment as a fait accompli," Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO) added that far-right members of the party have set expectations too high for conservatives who don't understand how impeachment works.

“I think there’s an expectation in the base now: ‘You voted for impeachment.’ … They look at this as an impeachment vote,” he explained.

"Leadership has a short window to find an off-ramp that would please both the impeachment skeptics and supporters within their own ranks," Carney wrote. "Investigators want to decide as early as late January on drafting impeachment articles, but whether the conference has the votes to recommend booting the president will likely factor into leaders’ decision to go further down that path."

With the report noting there is no hard evidence that can be used against Biden, some Republicans are already attempting to temper expectations.

ALSO READ: Let fear be your greatest motivator in 2024

According to Rep. David Joyce (R-OH), "There’s not evidence to impeach” before cautioning, "We’re a long way from impeachment."

You can read more here.

'I did nothing wrong': Trump snaps at reports of more election tampering

Following a bombshell report that revealed that there are audio recordings of Donald Trump and RNC head Ronna McDaniel urging Michigan election officials to not certify their state's 2020 presidential election results, the former president took to his social media platform on Sunday to insist he was just doing his job.

On Friday, Detroit News reporter Craig Mauger appeared on CNN to provide more details on his report, and told host Poppy Harlow, "There's a whistleblower that possesses the audio of these recordings. And the timing of the release and the ultimate decision on whether to release these recordings publicly is up to that person. You know, we were able to go as far as we could possibly go working with this person and another individual for this story and the decision on whether the recordings will be released will come down the road."

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'He will lose': Lindsey Graham says Trump is setting himself up for failure in 2024

ABC host Pierre Thomas pressed Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) on the example Donald Trump is setting by lying to children about the 2020 presidential election.

During a Sunday interview on ABC's This Week program, Thomas asked Graham about the Colorado Supreme Court's ruling that could bar Trump from the state's primary ballot because he participated in an insurrection.

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Trump is pushing his luck with judges after late Saturday legal filing: legal expert

Reacting to a late Saturday filing made by Donald Trump's lawyers aimed at getting the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals to toss special counsel Jack Smith's criminal case related to the Jan. 6 insurrection, State Attorney for Palm Beach County Dave Aronberg called it a waste of time for the court that has the potential to anger the judges.

Speaking with MSNBC's Jonathan Capehart, the prosecutor immediately dubbed the filing, once again asserting presidential immunity, as "ridiculous."

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How a Trump conviction would throw the GOP convention into chaos

With Donald Trump all but assured to win enough Republican Party delegates to be awarded the party's 2024 presidential nomination, his legal problems could throw a wrench in the works before conservatives descend on Milwaukee in mid-July.

According to a report from USA Today's David Jackson, while it appears the votes are there the path is still littered with potholes including the very real possibility he would be convicted before the convention begins.

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Trump’s escalating racist rhetoric and the far right’s plan for a slow civil war

As the 2024 presidential election campaign heats up, Republican front-runner Donald Trump is escalating his racist rhetoric, repeatedly saying in recent days that immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country,” drawing comparisons to Hitler. Journalist Jeff Sharlet says, “Even more important than the substance is the spectacle, the drama, that makes him the exciting and, in fascist terms, the man of action.” Sharlet explains Project 2025, an agency-by-agency plan backed by a coalition of conservative groups for implementing fascism if Trump regains power, and how the former president is giving the far right the national stage they’ve always wanted.


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Former GOP staffer burns Republicans for hypocrisy over Colorado top court's Trump ruling

Conservatives who are upset that the Colorado Supreme Court blocked Donald Trump from the state's GOP primary ballot have a serious hypocrisy problem, a former GOP staffer said on Saturday.

Kurt Bardella, a former staffer for Republican Senator Olympia Snowe and Republican Congressman Darrell Issa, appeared on MSNBC's Ayman, where he was asked about the Colorado case. He drew a connection between the Supreme Court's task in this case and the one that decided the 2000 election.

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Rand Paul roasts Trump for trying to remove Obama from ballot over birth certificate claim

Donald Trump's chickens are coming home to roost with recent attempts to remove him from the ballot, GOP Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky said on Saturday.

Paul, who has been a staunch Trump defender after initially being critical, opened up about the former president in a holiday-inspired post. The post wasn't about Christmas or Hanukkah, however; it was about Festivus, inspired by a Seinfeld storyline.

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'Lawyer up and shut up': Defense lawyer has advice for RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel

"Don't talk about it anymore" is the advice one defense expert would give to Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel, who could face potential criminal charges for pressure she and Donald Trump reportedly put on election workers to refuse vote certification.

Shan Wu, a defense attorney and a former federal prosecutor, appeared on CNN Newsroom with Jim Acosta on Saturday, where he was asked about reports out of Michigan which say the former president and McDaniel offered county-level election workers legal services in exchange for refusing the certification.

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