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Trump plans to build massive arch without Congress' approval using a century-old loophole

The Trump administration has no plans to seek congressional approval for President Donald Trump's proposed 250-foot arch near the Lincoln Memorial and is instead relying on a 100-year-old authorization for a completely different project that was never built, according to a report.

Administration officials argue that Congress effectively pre-approved the arch when lawmakers ratified a 1925 report by the Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission, which called for two 166-foot columns on Columbia Island, The Washington Post reported Wednesday. Those columns were never constructed. Trump's arch would use the same 166-foot base but add another 84 feet of pedestal and statuary to reach 250 feet total.

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CNN legal expert flags 'legal bank shot' in J6 officers' lawsuit against Trump

CNN legal analyst Elie Honig was stunned by the Trump administration's decision to create a $1.8 billion fund that could be used to compensate right-wing rioters on Jan. 6, 2021, and what that could mean for two police officers who defended the U.S. Capitol that day and have now filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration.

The former federal prosecutor told CNN anchor Jake Tapper on Wednesday the lawsuit filed by Officer Harry Dunn of the U.S. Capitol Police and Officer Daniel Hodges of Washington’s Metropolitan Police was aiming to halt the Trump administration from creating a $1.8 billion slush fund, and whether their case will have legal standing.

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Nicolle Wallace spots big problem with Trump's revenge tour that could haunt the GOP

President Donald Trump has been on a tear knocking out lawmakers in primaries for perceived disloyalty, most recently taking down Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY). But that is not necessarily going to serve his party well, MS NOW's Nicolle Wallace argued on Wednesday.

In fact, she said, it may only be causing his party to circle the drain faster in the midterms.

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MAGA darling lashes out at podcast megastar Alex Cooper after pregnancy announcement

A MAGA influencer lashed out at pop culture podcast host Alex Cooper on Wednesday during her podcast over Cooper's recent pregnancy announcement.

Allie Beth Stuckey, host of the "Relatable" podcast on BlazeTV, said during a new episode that Cooper's pregnancy announcement showed how the podcast host had "abandoned her old way of life that she is still promoting to so many women" by settling down and getting married. She described Cooper's popular podcast, "Call Her Daddy," as a "sex gossip" show even though Cooper regularly discusses other topics like relationships and female empowerment.

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Ex-GOP operative alarmed as Trump's 'mind-boggling corruption' becomes 'open fire hydrant'

A former Republican political operative ripped the new level of corruption that Trump has reached with a "MAGA Congress" backing him all the way.

"There are no examples of corruption that are even in the same galaxy as this," Steve Schmidt said in an episode of his podcast. "It is truly, truly incredible, mind-boggling, and yet it rolls on, and it will continue to do so until there's a Democratic Congress that makes it stop."

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'You know what makes me angry?' Trump nominees scolded during tense hearing

A high-ranking Democratic leader delivered a scathing response to two of President Donald Trump's federal judicial nominees during a congressional hearing on Wednesday.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) told judicial nominees Matthew A. Schwartz, a third Trump personal attorney who the president has nominated to a circuit court seat, and former Solicitor General of Ohio Benjamin Flowers that he was disappointed in them when they did not clearly respond to his questions about the Capitol attacks on Jan. 6, 2021.

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First GOP lawmaker hits DOJ with formal demand over Trump's fund to pay off allies

Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) became the first Republican member of Congress to formally demand information from the Justice Department about President Donald Trump's $1.776 billion "anti-Weaponization" fund, which he created as a settlement with his own administration after dropping a $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS for failing to secure his tax information.

The fund, which was not authorized by Congress and not approved by the court overseeing his lawsuit, purports to be able to pay out money to any Trump ally who was a victim of "lawfare." Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has refused to rule out payouts to perpetrators of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

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Trump Mobile breach exposes customer data — and wildly inflated sales claims: report

YouTube journalist Coffeezilla says a data vulnerability on TrumpMobile.com exposed customer information and indicated that the company's reported sales figures are likely fiction.

In a video posted Tuesday, Coffeezilla, whose real name is Stephen Findeisen, said he was among the customers whose personal data was exposed by the security flaw, including his mailing address and email. The vulnerability, he said, was flagged to the Trump Mobile team multiple times before he went public.

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Emboldened Trump fires a warning shot at Lauren Boebert

President Donald Trump hinted on Wednesday that a Republican lawmaker who crossed him and sided with the president's foe Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) could be next on his revenge list.

Trump revived his threats against Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO), "an 'America First' firebrand who broke with the president by pushing to release the Jeffrey Epstein files and campaigning with Massie last weekend," according to a report from Politico's Playbook.

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Judge quotes Orwell in ruling against Trump's White House

A federal judge quoted author George Orwell in a recent ruling against the Trump administration that orders White House staff to preserve records.

U.S. District Judge John Bates granted a preliminary injunction on Wednesday that requires most White House employees to preserve presidential and vice presidential records. The 54-page decision opened with a line from Orwell's dystopian novel 1984.

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Thomas Massie and his new 'loud minority' may get the last laugh against Trump: analysis

Rep. Thomas Massie's (R-KY) primary loss on Tuesday was another example of President Donald Trump's grip on the Republican Party, according to some political experts. But a new analysis suggests that Massie may get the last laugh against Trump before all is said and done.

Ben Jacobs, a political reporter for Slate, wrote in a new column that Massie appears to be growing a new "loud minority" coalition to fight against Trump. Jacobs attended Massie's watch party on Tuesday, where he noticed a peculiar energy in the air around a man who had just lost his race to the Trump-endorsed former Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein.

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MAGA sheriff accused of sending nude photos — and threatening felony charges to hush it up

MAGA-aligned former sheriff and Arizona Congressional candidate Mark Lamb faces allegations he sent women nude pictures and inappropriate text messages — then attempted to use the law enforcement powers of his office to keep it all under wraps from the public.

"Dozens of exchanges, explicit chats and sexual images ... appeared to come from Lamb's personal cell phone number and social media accounts to several women before and after he took over as Pinal County's top law enforcement officer in 2017, records and interviews show," said a new report from The Arizona Republic.

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DHS chief vows ICE will be at World Cup amid slumping ticket sales

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin and his agency are touting a major federal law enforcement presence at this summer's FIFA World Cup — even as new data suggests the tournament may be headed for an economic disappointment.

ICE and Homeland Security Investigations will work alongside Customs and Border Protection to combat human trafficking, drug smuggling, and counterfeit tickets and merchandise during the tournament, according to an official ICE post on X.

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