Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Trump News

Trump privately voicing 'concern' high court will rule against him: NYT's Maggie Haberman

Former President Donald Trump quietly fears the Supreme Court will back Colorado’s decision to bump him from the state's presidential ballot, New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman told CNN Friday.

“He has also voiced some concern,” Haberman told Kaitlan Collins.

Keep reading... Show less

Supreme Court 'wary of giving Mr. Trump the electoral boost' of a win: analyst

Law scholars are torn about what the Supreme Court might do once they are tasked with ruling on defendant Donald Trump.

There's thinking that the nine justices might seek some off-ramps and put Congress on the hot seat or they might let Trump stay on the 2024 ballot so that the voters ultimately decide if he's fit to run the country.

Keep reading... Show less

'Born for the moment': Columnist says Fani Willis' experience preps her to take down Trump

Special counsel Jack Smith and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, the two prosecutors who've charged former President Donald Trump with attempting to overturn the 2020 presidential election, are the perfect people for the job, according to Washington Monthly columnist Margaret Carlson.

Carlson appeared on Ari Melber's MSNBC show Thursday to discuss the two pivotal court cases moving through federal courts in Washington D.C. and state court in Georgia.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump makes a 'prediction' about what will happen if he loses 2024 election

Former President Donald Trump took to his Truth Social platform on Friday to proclaim in an all-caps rant that, if he is not elected in 2024, America will see a catastrophic financial collapse and a new "Great Depression."

"THE ECONOMY IS TERRIBLE & INFLATION, WHICH BY SOME ACCOUNTS IS MORE THAN 30% OVER THE LAST THREE YEARS, HAS TOTALLY DESTROYED THE BUYING POWER OF THE CONSUMER," Trump wrote. "THE ONLY THING THAT IS KEEPING THE ECONOMY 'ALIVE' IS THE FUMES OF WHAT WE ACCOMPLISHED DURING THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION. THE STOCK MARKET IS ONLY HIGH BECAUSE PEOPLE, & INSTITUTIONS, BELIEVE & EXPECT ME TO WIN THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 2024."

Keep reading... Show less

Expect a wave of new pleas from Trump co-defendants as Georgia trial starts: ex-prosecutor

Fulton County D.A. Fani Willis has already begun her election racketeering case against former President Donald Trump with multiple plea deals secured with several of his co-defendants, including attorneys Sidney Powell, Kenneth Chesebro, and Jenna Ellis.

But that could just be the beginning, former federal prosecutor Harry Litman told MSNBC's Symone Sanders on Friday — because as the trial kicks into high gear, there could be even more pleas as Willis makes her way to the top prize.

Keep reading... Show less

George Conway and ex-Trump lawyer Ty Cobb join Jack Smith in arguing against immunity

George Conway, a conservative attorney, and Donald Trump's former lawyer, Ty Cobb, threw their support behind Special Counsel Jack Smith Friday with a new filing slamming the former president's immunity defense, court records show.

Conway, a vocal critic of the former president, and Cobb are among 16 former prosecutors, government officials, and constitutional attorneys who added their names to an Amicus Brief filed in the D.C. Circuit's Court of Appeals.

Keep reading... Show less

Ballot removal successes have Trump finally 'interested in democracy': columnist

While it's not known if the recent booting of Donald Trump from the Colorado and Maine state ballots will survive a U.S. Supreme Court review, Trump's claims that the rulings violate the spirit of democracy are rich, considering that he started his political career trying to unjustly keep his political opponents off the ballot, David Frum writes in The Atlantic.

"Trump himself launched his presidential career by arguing that President Barack Obama should not have been able to run for president because Obama was not a natural-born citizen of the United States," Frum writes, later adding that Trump "tried to disqualify voters who’d exercised their right to vote by mail or whose ballots had for any reason not yet been counted by midnight on Election Day" back in 2020.

Keep reading... Show less

Ex-Mitt Romney adviser is a thorn in the side of old-guard Republicans: report

Mitt Romney’s former domestic policy adviser has become "one of the biggest thorns in the side of the Republican old guard," according to the Deseret News' Brigham Tomco.

In an interview with the Deseret News, Oren Cass told Tornco that the problem with Donald Trump has always been that he's "not necessarily a very effective builder."

Keep reading... Show less

Stiffed: How Trump's campaign visits cost local police departments

When former President Donald Trump makes a campaign appearance — whether its at fairgrounds in South Carolina or an Iowa fraternity house — along comes a rowdy crowd of thousands of supporters in bedazzled MAGA hats and Trump mugshot T-shirts shouting “U-S-A” chants.

And without fail, there’s local men and women in uniform — often from local police and fire departments — enlisted to provide security and keep the peace at the rallies for the former president who is facing 91 felony counts across four indictments and a New York civil trial that threatens to upend his business empire.

Keep reading... Show less

Fox News pundit mocked for shrugging off Trump's legal woes as 'some issues in the court'

What do you call 91 criminal charges in four separate court cases, a $250 million civil fraud trial, a pending $10 million civil defamation lawsuit and presidential ballot-blocking litigation filed in 32 states across the U.S.?

If you’re Fox News' Julie Banderas, and you’re talking about former President Donald Trump, you call it “some issues in the court system.”

Keep reading... Show less

'A big fat money judgment' against Trump is headed his way: former prosecutor

Now that the Second Circuit Court of Appeals has denied a request by Donald Trump to delay his defamation civil suit trial filed by E. Jean Carroll, the trial is set to begin in just over two weeks — and the former president is expected to lose and hand over millions more to the New York City writer.

During an appearance on MSNBC on Friday, former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner was asked how he expects it to play out. He speculated that the former president could be on the hook for double the $5 million he has already been ordered to pay in the first defamation trial.

Speaking with host Alex Witt, he stated, "We should watch for a big fat money judgment entered by the jury against Donald Trump."

"This is 'The Defamation Case: The Sequel,'" he joked before continuing, " when after a jury found that Donald Trump not only sexually-battered, but defamed E. Jean Carroll, and he went out and did it all over again. Rudy Giuliani taking a page from Donald Trump's playbook did the same thing and defamed the Georgia state election workers on the courthouse steps."

"This seems to be a play that they're running over and over again, but it's not a winning play: their luck will run out. The walls are closing in certainly in this case, and I think the jury awarded an aggregate $5 million the first time around. I would look for double that this time around," he elaborated, to which host Alex Witt could only add, "Wow."

Keep reading... Show less

'Sit this one out': Maine Sen. Susan Collins hit by blowback over her Trump ballot outrage

A statement from Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) on X expressing outrage that Maine's secretary of state has banished Donald Trump from the 2024 election ballot was not well received from critics — who noted her history of normally straddling meaningful controversies.

Shortly after Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows announced that, after considerable investigation, she believes the former president engaged in the insurrection on Jan 6, making him ineligible under the 14th Amendment, Collins expressed her dismay.

Keep reading... Show less

Michael Cohen says he gave lawyers fake AI-generated court cases: report

Donald Trump’s former fixer Michael Cohen mistakenly gave lawyers fake legal citations generated by artificial intelligence, the New York Times reported Friday.

Cohen said in unsealed court papers that Google Bard created the citations used in a motion provided to a federal judge in Manhattan, the Times reported.

Keep reading... Show less