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Trump's 'best case scenario' is being gifted to him by opponents: report

Critics of Donald Trump who hoped someone would emerge from the field of 2024 GOP candidates to threaten his grasp on the party are having to deal with new polling that shows the former president maintaining an enormous lead, Politico reported.

And the support for Trump is expanding.

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Here's how a Trump immunity win could blow up spectacularly in the Supreme Court's face

If the Supreme Court agrees to hear arguments on whether Donald Trump should be immune from criminal acts — and then rules in the former president's favor — those same justices may one day rue the day they made that decision, an expert wrote Monday.

It's the opinion of University of Baltimore School of Law Professor Kim Wehle, who pointed out that the former president has a history of ignoring the court — and he would be completely unrestrained from obeying them in the future.

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Senior Trump aide blurts out frustration over former president's 'unrestrained campaign'

According to MSNBC's Vaughan Hillyard, there is at least one senior aide to Donald Trump who is growing exasperated with the undisciplined campaign the former president is running made worse by his latest echoing of Hitleresque rhetoric, which ally Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) is defending.

Hillyard, who has been following the former president to his rallies as he makes a third bid for the Oval Office after losing to President Joe Biden in 2020, noted that Trump is taking his rallies to new extremes that his fans seem to lap up, and explained there are some concerns within the Trump camp.

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'We are saying Merry Christmas again': New Trump video vows to restore American 'decency'

Donald Trump released a blistering attack on President Joe Biden’s claims of decency Monday, sharing a video juxtaposing the president's quotes with scenes suggesting scandal.

The clips are followed by video, apparently put together by the campaign of Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-TX), of Trump and his wife enjoying a wholesome Christmas season.

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'What's wrong with him?': Lindsey Graham buried by MSNBC's Mika over latest Trump defense

Reacting to Sen. Lindsey Graham's response to questions about Donald Trump on Meet the Press on Sunday where he dismissed the former president's comments about immigrants "poisoning" American blood, "Morning Joe" co-host Mika Brzezinski pounced on the South Carolina Republican.

The show started out by playing clips of Graham telling MTP host Kristen Welker that Trump's "poisoning the blood of our country" wasn't important enough to even worry about while then adding, "You know, we're talking about language. I could care less what language people use as long as we get it right."

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Trump lawyer Alina Habba brags about being hit with $1M fine from judge: report

Donald Trump’s lawyer Alina Habba bragged to a crowd of conservatives Sunday about a $1 million fine she and the former president were hit with for filing “frivolous” lawsuits.

The lawyer was talking to a crowd at "AmericaFest," a conference sponsored by the right-wing Turning Point USA.

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Clarence Thomas could deal a blow to Trump's Supreme Court hopes:  ex-U.S. attorney

Should the Supreme Court decide to listen to special counsel Jack Smith's request to hear arguments on Donald Trump's contention that he is protected by presidential immunity in a bid to get many of his criminal indictments tossed out, Justice Clarence Thomas may play a key part -- but possibly not in a way the former president would prefer.

According to former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance in her Week Ahead newsletter, there is a very legitimate possibility that the far-right jurist may recuse himself based on recent history in a similar case.

That, in turn, could be a major setback for Trump that would then have a 5-3 conservative majority making a ruling.

According to Vance, "Given the gravity of the situation, the question of whether Justice Clarence Thomas will participate when the Supreme Court hears the appeal is all the more important," adding that Thomas has yet to announce whether he will participate in what could be a landmark case.

Vance then noted Thomas' close ties to the Jan. 6 insurrection via his wife, Ginni, who was an avid supporter of contesting the 2020 presidential election results and was in constant contact with Trump's White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.

ALSO READ: Inside a nightmare: Donald Trump’s White House on April 4, 2025

"In addition to the well-known support his wife Ginni lent to pushing the Big Lie, Thomas’ former law clerk John Eastman is Trump’s co-defendant in Georgia and an unindicted co-conspirator in this case," Vance wrote before suggesting, "Leaving aside the situation with his wife, which would be sufficient to cause any reasonably prudent jurist to sit the case out, Justice Thomas recently recused in another matter involving John Eastman. The relationship was too close for even Clarence Thomas to ignore."

You can read more here.

'Frustrated' Joe Biden hits aides with 'stern words' as he slips to Trump: report

"Increasingly frustrated" President Joe Biden ordered his closest aides into a Thanksgiving meeting as his effort to stay in the White House has become more of a battle than he expected, the Washington Post reported Monday.

The meeting included “stern words” that his poll numbers against Trump were “unacceptably low” — and he demanded to know what action was being taken, the Post reported.

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Capitol cop sounds alarm about a GOP 'betrayal' if another Trump mob storms Congress

According to one of the Capitol cops who suffered injuries on Jan. 6 when supporters of Donald Trump staged an insurrection and sent members of Congress fleeing for their lives, he and his colleagues worry that the same Republicans he protected that day will turn their backs on them again if history repeats itself in 2024.

In an interview with Salon's Chauncey DeVega, Sgt. Aquilino Gonell, one of four officers who testified before the House select committee investigating Donald Trump's part in inciting the riot, suggested Capitol police would be "restrained" by Republicans from repelling a second attack.

Gonell started off by asserting that some Trump supporters think nothing bad happened on Jan. 6, while others acknowledge what occurred but downplay how bad it was.

In particular, he pointed the finger at GOP lawmakers, telling DeVega that "some of the same people who are saying those ridiculous things are the very same people who I risked my life for on that day at the Capitol. How can you reconcile that? I risked my life to protect you and then you turn around and say, 'Well, these were my friends. These were my supporters. It's okay. We condone the violence on Jan. 6 because of that.'"

ALSO READ: Inside a nightmare: Donald Trump’s White House on April 4, 2025

With that in mind, he added that "some of the same Republicans who were running for their lives on Jan. 6, who me and the other Capitol Police were risking our lives to defend, are now saying that the Jan. 6 mob are 'political prisoners' or 'peaceful protesters' and should be released. These Republicans claim to support the police and the rule of law, but they are demanding that the same people who assaulted me should be freed."

Because of that, Gonell suggested, some GOP members of Congress not only can't be counted on to stand up for the rule of law, but may give moral support to the next wave of Trump partisans if another Jan. 6 occurs.

"Frankly, if another Jan. 6 took place, I would not trust these Republicans to not betray me and the other police," he bluntly stated. "Would the Republicans keep us from protecting the Capitol from Trump's followers? Yes. Perhaps even restrain us and hold us down? Yes, I believe they would."

You can read his whole interview here.

White House says Trump migrant remarks echo 'fascists'

The White House on Sunday condemned Donald Trump for using what it described as fascist-like rhetoric after the former president said immigrants were "poisoning the blood of our country."

It also accused Trump of "praising dictators" when he quoted Russian President Vladimir Putin at a rally on Saturday in New Hampshire, which next month will vote on a Republican candidate to face Democrat Joe Biden in the 2024 election.

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'Doomsday option': Diplomats warn governments to prepare for worst if Trump returns

Diplomats of at least two foreign countries have told their governments to prepare for a “doomsday” option following intel they’ve received about Trump’s plans if he returns to the White House, Reuters reported Monday.

At least one of those diplomats, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, represented a Northern European nation that’s a member of NATO.

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Melania's ex-pal: All but one of Trump's heirs has 'poisoned blood' he wants to eliminate

Melania Trump is rarely seen in public these days, but while her husband, Donald Trump, is attacking immigrants for "poisoning the blood" of America, she was presiding over an immigration ceremony for those who officially become citizens.

Among the things the former first lady told the crowd is that her life as the wife of a self-described billionaire was difficult.

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Trump no longer supports a big stock market after Biden sets new record

By Tim Reid (Reuters) -Donald Trump, who predicted three years ago that if Democratic President Joe Biden won the White House in 2020 markets would crash, said on Sunday that stock markets hitting record highs were just making "rich people richer." Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican nomination, often took credit for a rising stock market when he was president between 2017 and 2021. He was mocked by Biden last week for wrongly predicting a crash when they campaigned against each other in 2020. The Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a record high last week, topping 37,000 and surpassin...


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