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Tag: 2020 presidential election

  • Georgia Gubernatorial Ad Bashes ‘Judas’ Who Betrayed Trump

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    Georgia’s Republican secretary of State Brad Raffensperger is eternally a MAGA target.
    Photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images

    We’re all used to negative campaign ads, but this inaugural offering from Georgia Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Jackson is quite the doozy:

    Yes, that’s right. The decidedly un-mom-like mom in this ad sneeringly tells her innocent-looking son that in order to lower expectations for his life, he was named “Brad” after Georgia secretary of State and Jackson gubernatorial-primary rival Brad Raffensperger, who “turned on his own kind” (Republicans? White people?) and consorted with the likes of Stacey Abrams. Mom’s backup name for him, she tells the traumatized child, was “Judas.” In case you missed the connection, the ad ends with the words “Brad ‘Judas’ Raffensperger” across the screen.

    All Raffensperger did to earn this most hateful of epithets (in deeply Christian Georgia, anyway) was to certify Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential win in the state and refuse Donald Trump’s wildly corrupt and inappropriate demand that he “find” enough new votes to change the outcome. Trump tried to purge Raffensperger (along with his co-certifier of the Biden win, Governor Brian Kemp) in a 2022 primary but failed. Now Raffensperger is running for governor (Kemp is term-limited) precisely at the time Trump is reviving his conspiracy-theory-laden take on the 2020 election in Georgia. Just this week, FBI agents and Trump’s director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, were in Atlanta hauling off boxes of 2020 voter files. So Jackson’s toxic ad is designed to arouse fresh MAGA resentment of the public official who “turned on his own kind.”

    Jackson isn’t just a random jerk. A former health-care executive, he’s pledged to spend up to $50 million of his own money in the 2026 race, where he is posing (as you might tell from his ad) as a defender of the president. Trouble is there is already a wacky rich MAGA dude in the race: state lieutenant governor Burt Jones, who was a fake Trump elector in 2020. Indeed, Jones has already been endorsed by the Boss. But Jackson made it clear right away he was as much of a target as “Judas” Raffensperger, as the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported:

    Jackson, 71, wasted no time at his Wednesday rally at Jackson Healthcare’s opulent Alpharetta campus, calling Jones “a so-called front-runner who was weak as can be and as lazy as the day is long. He wants the title of governor, but not the job.”

    If Jones were to win the nomination, he added to a crowd of hundreds of employees, “we would be risking losing his seat to a radical Democrat — or a Republican who acts like one. I wasn’t willing to sit and let that happen to our president or our great state.”

    Jackson’s surprise entry into the race wasn’t the first unwelcome surprise for Burt Jones in recent months. During the Christmas holidays, TV viewers in Georgia were treated to a $5 million barrage of ads accusing the lieutenant governor of corruption. They were bought by a shadowy PAC, and all of Jones’s gubernatorial rivals denied having anything to do with it. Is it possible Rick Jackson was the mystery donor for these nasty-grams aimed at softening up Jones? Nobody knows, but the plot has thickened. And we do know Jackson doesn’t have a problem with running negative ads.

    The irony is that Jackson may help Raffensperger win by splitting the MAGA vote and battling with Jones in a way that distracts attention from the secretary of State’s perfidious behavior in refusing to steal an election for Trump. There’s also a fourth major candidate, Attorney General Chris Carr, who agreed with Raffensperger and Kemp about the 2020 results but has gone out of his way to be lovey-dovey with the 45th and 47th president ever since he trounced his own Trump-endorsed primary opponent in 2022. There are all kinds of murder-suicide scenarios on the table for this fractious Republican field.

    And victory-minded Republicans are aware this could be a good year for Democrats in Georgia as elsewhere. Yet another survivor of the Republican civil war Trump set off in Georgia in 2022, then–Republican lieutenant governor Geoff Duncan, is now running for governor as a Democrat, though former Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and former Labor commissioner Mike Thurmond lead him in the polls.

    It could be a wild ride to November in the state Trump just can’t leave alone.

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    Ed Kilgore

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  • Tina Peters’ lawyers try to convince Colorado court to overturn conviction for voting system breach

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    DENVER (AP) — Lawyers for former Colorado elections clerk Tina Peters will try to convince a state appeals court on Wednesday to overturn her conviction in a case revolving around the 2020 presidential election as her supporters, including President Donald Trump, continue to pressure the state to set her free.

    Peters, the former clerk in Mesa County, was convicted of state crimes for orchestrating a data breach of the county’s elections equipment, driven by false claims about voting machine fraud after Trump lost his reelection bid. She is serving a nine-year sentence at a prison in Pueblo after being convicted in 2024 in her home county, a Republican stronghold that supported Trump.

    Trump pardoned Peters in December, but his pardon power does not extend to state crimes. Peters’ lawyers have said Trump has the authority to pardon her, arguing that President George Washington issued pardons to people convicted of both state and federal crimes during the Whiskey Rebellion in 1795.

    Lawyers for the state pointed out that the governor of Pennsylvania at the time issued pardons to those who broke state laws during the unrest. Peters’ lawyers then argued that the president has a right to pardon people who committed crimes to carry out federal duties, such as preserving election information.

    Prosecutors said Peters became fixated on voting problems after becoming involved with activists who had questioned the 2020 presidential election results, including Douglas Frank, an Ohio math teacher, and MyPillow founder Mike Lindell.

    Peters used another person’s security badge to allow a former surfer affiliated with Lindell, Conan Hayes, to watch a software update of her county’s election management system. Prosecutors said he made copies of the system’s hard drive before and after the upgrade, and that partially redacted security passwords later turned up online, prompting an investigation. Hayes was not charged with any wrongdoing.

    Peters didn’t deny the deception but said she had to do it to make sure election records weren’t erased. She claims she should not have been prosecuted because she had a duty under federal law to preserve them.

    Her lawyers also say the partially redacted passwords didn’t pose a security risk and pointed out that some of the same type of voting system passwords for Colorado counties were accidentally posted on a state website until they were discovered in 2024. Prosecutors determined there was no intent to commit a crime so no charges were filed.

    Lawyers for the state have argued that Peters did not need to commit crimes to protect election data because her staff had already backed up the information before the upgrade. Instead, they say the hard drive copies captured proprietary Dominion Voting Systems software.

    Peters also said District Court Judge Matthew Barrett violated her First Amendment rights by punishing her with a stiff sentence of nearly a decade for making allegations about election fraud. He called her a “charlatan” and said she posed a danger to the community for spreading lies about voting and undermining the democratic process.

    Last month, Peters lost an attempt in federal court to be released from prison while she appeals her conviction.

    Her lawyers say she is entitled to at least a new sentencing hearing because Barrett based his sentence partially on a contempt conviction in a related case that the appeals court threw out last year. They also are asking the appeals court to recognize Trump’s pardon and immediately set Peters free.

    Peters’ release has become a cause celebre in the election conspiracy movement.

    Trump has lambasted both Democratic Gov. Jared Polis and the Republican district attorney who brought the charges, Dan Rubinstein, for keeping Peters in prison.

    The Federal Bureau of Prisons tried but failed to get Peters moved to a federal prison. Polis has said he is considering granting clemency for Peters, characterizing her sentence as “harsh.”

    Jake Lang, who was charged with assaulting a police officer during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and was later pardoned by Trump, announced on social media last month that “January 6er Patriots” and U.S. Marshals would storm a Colorado prison to release Peters unless she is freed by the end of this month.

    The post included a phone video interview with Peters from behind bars. But a message on Peters’ X account said she is not affiliated with any demonstration or event at the prison and denounced any use of force against it.

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    The Associated Press

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  • Power stripped from Education Department in latest Trump administration move to dismantle it

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    The Trump administration announced Tuesday that the Department of Education signed a series of interagency agreements to shift power from a handful of its offices and programs to other federal agencies as it works to dismantle the federal department for good. 

    “The Trump Administration is taking bold action to break up the federal education bureaucracy and return education to the states,” Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said in a Tuesday press release. “Cutting through layers of red tape in Washington is one essential piece of our final mission. As we partner with these agencies to improve federal programs, we will continue to gather best practices in each state through our 50-state tour, empower local leaders in K-12 education, restore excellence to higher education, and work with Congress to codify these reforms.”

    The Department of Education announced six interagency agreements (IAAs) Tuesday with the Department of Labor, the Department of Health and Human Services, the State Department and the Department of the Interior to co-manage or take a growing role in managing certain offices and programs, according to a background call with the media. 

    “We at the Department of Ed have engaged with other partner agencies over 200 times through IAAS to procure various services of other partner agencies over the years. Even the Biden administration did it to help implement the First Step Act, entering into an IAA with the Department of Justice. And so this is a tool that’s frequently used,” a senior Education Department official said Tuesday during a call with the media. 

    THE GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN EXPOSED THE BIGGEST LIE IN EDUCATION

    Secretary of Education Linda McMahon  ( Mandel Ngan / AFP/Getty Images)

    One agreement includes the Department of Labor establishing an elementary and secondary education partnership to “empower parents and states, promote innovation, and deliver program improvements,” according to press release on the announcement. 

    The Department of Labor also will take a “growing role in managing” the Education Department’s higher education grant programs and institution-based grant program, according to the press call. 

    Additionally, the Department of the Interior will take a “growing role” in administering the Indian Education program, according to the call. The Department of Education also signed a pair of Health and Human Services agreements related to the Department of Education’s foreign medical accreditation programs and establishing a new program called Child Care Access Means Parents in School to promote on-campus child care for parents enrolled in college. 

    The announcement also included establishing a new program with the State Department to oversee international education and foreign language studies programs.

    “These partnerships really mark a major step forward in improving management of select programs and leveraging these partner agencies’ administrative expertise, their experience working with relevant stakeholders and streamline the bureaucracy that has accumulated here at Ed over the decades,” a senior department official said during the call. “We are confident that this will lead to better services for grantees, for schools, for families across the country as a result of these partnerships.”

    The announcement follows Trump’s pledge to dismantle the agency altogether, White House spokeswoman Liz Huston told Fox News Digital Tuesday. 

    “President Trump promised the American people he would dismantle the Department of Education. Today, Secretary McMahon is delivering on that promise with bold, decisive action to return education where it belongs — at the state and local level,” Huston said. “The Trump Administration is fully committed to doing what’s best for American students, which is why it’s critical to shrink this bloated federal education bureaucracy while still ensuring efficient delivery of funds and essential programs. The Democrat shutdown made one thing unmistakably clear: students and teachers don’t need Washington bureaucrats micromanaging their classrooms.”

    Education Department

    The U.S. Department of Education headquarters building in Washington, D.C.  (J. David Ake/Getty Images)

    President Donald Trump signed an executive order in March calling on McMahon to “take all necessary steps to facilitate the closure of the Department of Education and return authority over education to the States and local communities while ensuring the effective and uninterrupted delivery of services, programs, and benefits on which Americans rely.” 

    The Department of Education was established in 1979 and requires Congressional action to officially shutter, but has not taken meaningful steps on Trump’s order to eliminate the federal department. McMahon also has previously acknowledged that Congress is needed in order to officially shutter the Education Department, with the administration instead working to dismantle it by allocating its authority to other federal agencies. 

    Shuttering the Department of Education was among Trump’s lengthy list of campaign platforms, with the then-2024 presidential candidate touting that he would end the federal bureaucracy at the agency by punting its responsibilities to the states, subsequently elevating the control local communities and parents have over schooling. 

    SECRETARY OF EDUCATION POINTS OUT THAT THE GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN SHOWS HER DEPARTMENT IS UNNEEDED

    President Donald Trump holds an executive order relating to education in the Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, April 23, 2025, in Washington, as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer and Education Secretary Linda McMahon watch. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    President Donald Trump holds an executive order relating to education in the Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, April 23, 2025, in Washington. (AP NEWSROOM)

    “The Department of Education has entrenched the education bureaucracy and sought to convince America that Federal control over education is beneficial,” Trump’s executive order said in March. “While the Department of Education does not educate anyone, it maintains a public relations office that includes over 80 staffers at a cost of more than $10 million per year.” 

    The federal government just emerged from the longest shutdown in U.S. history, at 43 days, with McMahon authoring an op-ed claiming the shutdown exposed how “little the Department of Education will be missed.”

    President Trump reopens the government

    President Donald Trump signs the funding bill to reopen the government, in the Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2025, in Washington.  (Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo)

    TRUMP DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ROLLS OUT LATEST STEP TO EXPAND SCHOOL CHOICE NATIONWIDE

    “Our nation just experienced the longest government shutdown in its history,” McMahon wrote in the USA Today piece published Sunday. “The 43-day shutdown, which came smack in the middle of the fall semester, showed every family how unnecessary the federal education bureaucracy is to their children’s education. Students kept going to class. Teachers continued to get paid. There were no disruptions in sports seasons or bus routes.” 

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    “The shutdown proved an argument that conservatives have been making for 45 years: The U.S. Department of Education is mostly a pass-through for funds that are best managed by the states,” she continued. 

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  • Obama’s presence and Trump’s policies consume 11th-hour rally to keep NJ blue

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    Enthusiasm was high among New Jersey Democratic voters who flocked to a community college campus Saturday evening to hear from former President Barack Obama as he rallied support for Rep. Mikie Sherrill in her campaign for the governorship.

    “I heard Barack Obama was gonna be here. And I love Barack Obama, so I really came out here for that,” one voter, Alexis from South Jersey, told Fox Digital. “But I do support Mikie, as well.” 

    “I want to hear Obama,” Robert, from Spring Lake, told Fox Digital. “I think a lot of people want to hear Obama. Wouldn’t it be great to have a message of hope at this point in time?” 

    Hundreds of supporters wrapped around multiple blocks surrounding the Essex County College’s gymnasium on Saturday to hear from Obama and Sherrill as the New Jersey election comes down to its final days. The packed auditorium hit capacity before the “Get Out the Vote” rally officially kicked off, with supporters also watching the rally from an overflow parking lot. 

    SHERRILL INSISTS NJ A DEM STRONGHOLD AHEAD OF OBAMA VISIT, REJECTING GOP MOMENTUM: ‘NOT A PURPLE STATE’

    Former President Barack Obama during a campaign event for Rep. Mikie Sherrill, Democratic gubernatorial candidate for New Jersey, in Newark, on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. (Adam Gray/Getty Images)

    Prominent rally speakers and attendees alike celebrated hearing from Obama on Saturday, but also repeatedly spoke about President Donald Trump, slamming him for efforts to deport illegal aliens, and pinning blame for the ongoing federal government shutdown on Trump and Republicans. 

    A handful of voters who spoke to Fox Digital relayed that their ballot was not one solely focused on Sherrill, but also a vote against Trump and his administration.  

    “Well, the top issue is Trump,” said Robert from Spring Lake. “There’s nothing else other than that.… Trump is absolutely the worst,” he added, citing that Trump is allegedly “anti-science” and against education. 

    New Jersey Democratic voters

    Democratic New Jersey voters wrapped around multiple blocks of Newark on Nov. 1 ahead of a rally headlining former President Barack Obama. (Fox News Digital )

    “To get Trump out of office, number one,” one female voter from South Jersey told Fox Digital of why she came out to the rally and her top voting concerns this election. 

    “I am voting for Mikie Sherrill because she actually understands all the people. She is not a minion for Trump,” another South Jersey voter added. 

    CLIFF-HANGER: CIATTARELLI, SHERRILL CLAIM UPPER HAND IN CRUCIAL NEW JERSEY SHOWDOWN FOR GOVERNOR

    Obama also leaned into slamming Trump during his remarks to the crowd, claiming the current economy has benefited “Trump’s billionaire friends,” while “ordinary families” pay increased prices at check-out lines due to Trump’s “shambolic tariff policy.” 

    Anti-Trump gear at Sherrill rally.

    Vendors set up tables of anti-Trump gear outside of Democratic New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Mikie Sherrill’s rally in Newark. (Fox News Digital )

    “Let’s face it, our country and our politics are in a pretty dark place right now,” Obama told the audience on Saturday. “It’s hard to know where to start, because every day this White House offers up a fresh batch of lawlessness and carelessness and mean-spiritedness. And just plain old craziness.”

    Comments targeting Trump and his administration extended to attacks on GOP gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli, as well, with Obama casting him as the president’s toady and a “suck up” to the Republican Party. 

    Trump made inroads with New Jersey voters just a year ago, in his decisive general election win over former Vice President Kamala Harris. Trump cut his 2020 loss from 16 points in the Garden State to six in 2024, and flipped five counties to the GOP, invigorating Republicans in the state to keep the momentum going as Ciattarelli launched his bid for Drumthwacket. 

    “Please go out and vote,” Irvington Councilwoman Charnette Frederic told Fox Digital. “And I’m hoping Obama is the last push to remind you.”

    WITH LEGACY ON THE LINE, OBAMA HITTING CAMPAIGN TRAIL TO BOOST DEMOCRATS IN KEY GOVERNOR ELECTIONS

    Obama speaks at Mikie Sherrill rally

    Former President Barack Obama speaks during a “Get Out the Vote” rally for gubernatorial candidate Mikie Sherrill at Essex County College Gymnasium on Nov. 1, 2025, in Newark. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

    Frederic has served as an Irvington councilwoman since 2012, and said Obama’s presence in the state for past campaign rallies spurred an influx of voters, remarking she’s hopeful the same will unfold ahead of Tuesday. 

    “I am an immigrant, and I believe in treating people with respect and dignity,” Frederic said. “Whatever I’m seeing right now, this is not the kind of opportunity that we want for our people,” adding that Sherrill will “stand for the people” against the White House’s stances on immigration and other policies. 

    Sherrill, DNC chair Ken Martin, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, and other local Democrats took the stage of the auditorium to rally support for Sherrill, while also criticizing the Trump administration. 

    NEW JERSEY DEMOCRATIC GOVERNOR HOPEFUL ATTENDS ‘NO KINGS’ PROTEST, VOWS TO FIGHT TRUMP ‘TOOTH AND NAIL’

    Entrance to Newark rally

    The entrance to the “Get Out the Vote” rally for New Jersey Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mikie Sherrill at Essex County College Gymnasium. (Fox News Digital )

    “But my fight doesn’t and can’t end at the border of New Jersey. We’ve got to take on all those hits coming from Trump and Washington, D.C. Because right now the president is running a worldwide extortion racket. You pay more for everything from the coffee you drink in the morning to the groceries you’re cooking dinner with at night as Trump pockets billions. His energy plan is designed for just one audience. The fossil fuel industry,” Sherrill claimed. 

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    During this off-year election cycle, New Jersey and Virginia are holding gubernatorial elections, while other jurisdictions such as New York City are holding mayoral races and other local races. 

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  • Hannity announces he will host town hall with GOP New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli

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    Fox News host Sean Hannity announced he will host a town hall with Republican New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli that will air on Fox News Thursday.

    New Jersey’s governor’s race is one of the most closely watched elections, as Ciattarelli once again looks to turn the blue Garden State red after coming close to beating Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy in 2021. 

    CIATTARELLI GAINS MOMENTUM IN NEW JERSEY GOVERNOR’S RACE AS POLLS NARROW SHARPLY

    The polls in recent weeks against his opponent, Democratic gubernatorial nominee Rep. Mikie Sherrill, have tightened. 

    Asian American voters will play a big role in the New Jersey gubernatorial election as a DNC official warns the party should increase its AAPI outreach efforts in coming elections.  (Victor J. Blue/Getty Images;Mark Kauzlarich/Getty Images)

    Fox News poll conducted Oct. 10–14 put Sherrill at 50% support among likely voters, with Ciattarelli at 45%. Sherrill’s 5-point advantage was down from an 8-point lead in Fox News’ September survey in New Jersey.

    MAGA STAR JOINS CIATTARELLI ON CAMPAIGN TRAIL IN NEW JERSEY AS REPUBLICANS AIM TO FLIP GOVERNOR’S OFFICE

    In an interview with Fox News Digital on Oct. 15, Ciattarelli noted that he “made big gains” in his 2021 showing “in Hudson County and Passaic County,” two long-time Democratic Party strongholds. He also pointed out that President Donald Trump has a following in those counties.

    Republican gubernatorial nominee in New Jersey Jack Ciattarelli

    Jack Ciattarelli, the Republican nominee for governor in New Jersey, is interviewed by Fox News Digital on Oct. 15, 2025 in Bayonne, N.J. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News )

    “And the president did very, very well in ’24 in those very same counties. And if you take a look at who’s been endorsing me, including some very prominent Democrats here in Hudson County, people want change,” Ciattarelli argued.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION ON HOW TO PARTICIPATE IN THE ‘HANNITY’ TOWN HALL WITH JACK CIATTARELLI

    Meanwhile, Sherrill has cited Ciattarelli’s approval of President Trump’s policies against him. 

    NJ REPUBLICAN CIATTARELLI THREATENS TO SUE SHERRILL OVER OPIOID CLAIM

    On Oct. 8, she charged that her Republican rival had “shown zero signs of standing up to this president.” 

    “In fact, the president himself called Jack 100% MAGA, and he’s shown every sign of being that,” Sherrill asserted.

    The race has been rocked by explosive accusations on both sides. 

    According to Sherrill’s military records, the United States Naval Academy blocked her from taking part in her 1994 graduation amid a cheating scandal, which Ciattarelli called disqualifying. 

    TUNE IN TO FOX NEWS THURSDAY AT 9PM ET TO WATCH ‘HANNITY’S’ TOWN HALL WITH JACK CIATTARELLI

    The veteran later took aim at her Republican opponent by accusing him of being “complicit” in tens of thousands of New Jerseyans’ opioid deaths, based on his owning a medical publishing company that pushed content promoting the use of opioids as a low-risk treatment for chronic pain.

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    Visit Hannity.com for ticket information for Thursday’s town hall in Point Pleasant, N.J., ahead of the state’s election on Nov. 4.

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  • Fulton District Attorney Fani Willis said to agree to testify to Republican-led committee

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    ATLANTA — Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis will finally testify to a special committee of the Georgia Senate after rebuffing their demands for more than a year, the committee’s leader said Friday.

    After refusing to appear last year and fighting a committee subpoena in court, Willis will comply with a new subpoena to be issued by the Senate Special Committee on Investigations to appear on Nov. 13, said its chairman, Sen. Bill Cowsert, R-Athens.

    It will be an opportunity for Republican lawmakers to ask her about the election interference case she brought against President Donald Trump and his allies.

    Cowsert said she agreed to testify to a limited scope of questioning that he could not disclose.

    Willis’ office did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

    Republicans have been vilifying Willis ever since she pursued the case, but Cowsert said his committee members want neither to persecute nor humiliate her.

    They just want her advice on legislation to regulate prosecutorial misconduct, he said.

    Willis was dislodged from her Trump prosecution after the state Supreme Court declined in September to consider her appeal of a Georgia Court of Appeals order disqualifying her from prosecuting conspiracy charges against Trump and eight others.

    The appeals court had found an appearance of impropriety in her romantic relationship with Nathan Wade, a special prosecutor she had assigned to the case.

    Republicans have raised questions about her use of taxpayer dollars in hiring him.

    “She can’t continue to create this impression that the laws don’t apply to her — that she’s being an obstructionist,” Cowsert said.

    Sen. Harold Jones, II, D-Augusta, one of two Democrats on the eight-member committee, welcomed Willis’ testimony. It will be an opportunity to give her side of the story, said Jones, who is the Senate minority leader.

    Despite her agreement to testify, the state Supreme Court will still hear oral arguments Nov. 4 in the dispute over the original subpoena, Cowsert said.

    Cowsert’s committee also got an update from a new commission established by the General Assembly to investigate allegations of prosecutorial misconduct.

    Investigators with the Prosecuting Attorneys Qualifications Commission have considered 36 complaints filed in 2024 and 86 so far this year. None merited promotion to a hearing panel, said Ian Heap, the commission executive director.

    The details of cases are not public unless they merit formal charges, so Heap could not answer Cowsert’s question about whether the commission had considered allegations against Willis.

    Cowsert said after the hearing that he merely wanted to know if her Nov. 13 testimony to his committee might be constrained by concerns about self-incrimination connected with any commission investigation.

    Cowsert said Heap’s report on the escalation in the number of complaints — there were only seven in 2023 — was new information to him. He wondered whether it indicated many prosecutors were misbehaving and the public now has a vehicle to complain — or whether the complaints were merely frivolous.

    Jones focused on Heap’s disclosure that all the complaints so far were deemed meritless and on the relevance of the law that created the commission.

    “I think that kind of shows that the law was not needed,” he said.

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    Dave Williams and Capitol Beat News Service

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  • Trump, Democrats locked in endless cycles of payback after Comey indictment and targeting president’s enemies

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    Let’s roll back the clock.

    After the 2020 election, Donald Trump found himself the target of multiple investigations.

    The flimsiest, and most partisan, was brought by Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg, who somehow elevated the Stormy Daniels payoffs from a misdemeanor to a felony, and got a conviction.

    Then there was Jack Smith, who launched two investigations — one involving classified documents, the other on allegations related to Jan. 6.

    And in Georgia, Fulton County DA Fani Willis investigated Trump’s famous phone call to Brad Raffensperger — “I just want to find 11,780 votes” — and some of Trump’s lawyers, such as Sidney Powell and Jenna Ellis, pleaded guilty.

    DEMS NOT BUDGING ON GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN DEMANDS AHEAD OF HIGH-STAKES TRUMP MEETING, JEFFRIES SUGGESTS

    Beyond that, New York AG Letitia James filed a civil suit about inflated property values that led to a fine that has since grown to half a billion dollars — a penalty so outrageous that an appeals court threw it out on grounds of cruel and unusual punishment.

    And what was the mindset of the media, the Democrats and at least half the country at that time?

    It was that Trump had done a lot of bad things, and if he could be successfully prosecuted before the 2024 election, he could be knocked out of the race. 

    But from Trump’s point of view, these were bogus cases brought by biased prosecutors — James had won election by vowing to go after him — and backed by unfair judges for the sole purpose of keeping him out of the White House.

    Joe Biden may have kept hands off — Jack Smith was named special counsel by AG Merrick Garland — but to the president it was all a grand left-wing conspiracy.

    And that’s why Trump feels entitled to payback.

    That’s why James Comey was just indicted, with Trump firing his own U.S. attorney who believed there wasn’t enough evidence, replacing him with a loyalist whose job was to charge the former FBI director.

    That’s why Tish James is now under investigation for alleged mortgage fraud, 

    That’s why the Trump DOJ has just subpoenaed Fani Willis’ travel records from last year, and is investigating Sen. Adam Schiff.

    President Donald Trump speaks to reporters as leaves the White House in Washington, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025.  (Jose Luis Magana/AP Photo)

    To Donald Trump, this is all fully justified payback.

    But he’s doing exactly what was done to him — going after political enemies — and doing it out in the open. He has ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to pursue these cases, and fast, which is weaponizing the Justice Department against those he despises, in a way that no previous president has ever done. 

    He pronounces these targets “guilty as hell” — that alone would be a scandal in any other administration for prejudicing a trial — and celebrates the unveiling of indictments, such as calling Comey a “sick person,” a “Dirty Cop” and a “SLIMEBALL.”

    So how does Trump justify doing what was done to him? He doesn’t. He’s never been big on consistency. And his MAGA base supports him no matter what.

    Keep in mind that the perjury allegation — based on a vague exchange about a leak to the Wall Street Journal about the Clinton Foundation, ironically — was investigated by special counsel John Durham in the first term, and by the DOJ’s inspector general, and neither brought charges.

    When Erik Seibert, the U.S. attorney in Virginia’s Eastern District, found insufficient evidence to charge Comey, Bondi pushed back in defense of the 15-year veteran, Still, Trump replaced him with White House aide and onetime beauty queen Lindsey Halligan, his former lawyer, who has never tried a criminal case. Halligan couldn’t even find the courtroom, and no prosecutor in the office agreed to accompany her, as is customary. Doesn’t matter. She had one job.

    TRUMP ANSWERS WHETHER COMEY INDICTMENT IS ABOUT JUSTICE OR REVENGE

    “My family and I have known for years that there are costs to standing up to Donald Trump,” Comey said in a video.

    Fourteen of the 23 grand jurors backed the two charges, just over the required minimum, and the jurors dismissed a proposed third count.

    National Review’s Andy McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor, called the indictment “so ill-conceived and incompetently drafted, he should be able to get it thrown out on a pretrial motion to dismiss.”

    Dan Abrams, ABC’s chief legal analyst (and founder of Mediaite) said on “This Week”: “I don’t even think that many in the Trump administration believe they’re going to get a conviction. I think that there’s a 95 percent-plus chance that there won’t be a conviction. That it’ll either get dismissed by a judge, there’ll be a hung jury, there’ll be an acquittal. But I’m not certain that that’s the end goal here.” 

    In other words, making Comey’s life miserable and forcing him to pay legal fees may be satisfying enough.

    Schiff, for his part, called the mortgage fraud allegation against him “the kind of stuff you see tinpot dictators do.” .

    But there’s a larger issue here than the culpability of Comey and the others. As a former Justice Department reporter, I know all too well that presidents are not supposed to intervene in criminal investigations, and that dates to a series of post-Watergate reforms after Richard Nixon’s attorney general went to prison.

    Former FBI Director James Comey

    Former FBI Director James Comey is sworn in prior to testifying before a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Russia’s alleged interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election on Capitol Hill in Washington, June 8, 2017. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

    But Trump does all this out in the open. There’s no need to rely on unnamed sources. When he issued a memo demanding investigations of his foes, he made it public. 

    “We can’t delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation and credibility,” the president wrote on Truth Social. He complained that “nothing is being done,” demanding that Bondi investigate Coney, James and Schiff. And now he’s talking about targeting Democratic donor and activist George Soros.

    The president also has a knack for letting his allies off the hook. After New York Mayor Eric Adams was indicted on corruption charges, Trump ordered the case dropped. Then he tried to lure Adams out of the race by offering him a job, to boost the chances of defeating the man he calls “Communist” Zohran Mamdani. Adams, stuck in single digits, just dropped out, and don’t be surprised if he winds up as an ambassador.

    When a deranged shooter in Michigan opened fire during a Mormon church service, and set the place on fire, killing at least four people, before being shot to death, Trump called it “horrendous” and called Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the killer hated Mormons.

    The president called it “another targeted attack on Christians.”

    What Trump and Leavitt neglected to mention is that the murderer has a Trump/Vance sign in front of his house.

    OREGON SUES OVER TRUMP ADMIN’S ‘WAR-RAVAGED PORTLAND’ NATIONAL GUARD TROOP DEPLOYMENT

    So despite the president’s insistence that left-wingers are responsible for virtually all political violence, here’s a case where a right-winger, and Trump fan, is responsible for cold-blooded mass murder. But one day there will a Democrat in the White House again, ready to use the same tactics unleashed by Trump.

    Dartmouth professor Brendan Nyhan, who heads a watchdog group, told the New York Times: “Do Republicans want to give President AOC unilateral powers to determine which Defense Department programs she wants to fund?”

    His forthcoming report says “50 percent of Democrats now support restricting or shutting down Fox News, up from 37 percent in 2021.” I would find that chilling, even if I didn’t work at Fox. Where is it written that the government should be shutting down news outlets?

    The larger point is this: Trump believes he’s entitled to payback because of all the indictments aimed at him. The Democrats believe Trump has shattered the wall that protected criminal probes from White House interference. And so we plunge into an endless cycle of retribution, with each administration investigating the previous one and justifying it as getting even for their own mistreatment. 

    President Donald Trump pumps fist

    WASHINGTON, DC – AUGUST 01: U.S. President Donald Trump pumps his fist while gesturing to a group of supporters as he departs the White House on August 01, 2025, in Washington, DC. Trump answered a range of questions from reporters before leaving and is scheduled to spend the weekend in Bedminster, New Jersey. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

    Footnote: The news conference that President Trump was going to hold with Bibi Netanyahu yesterday turned into a non-conference when Trump, of all people, refused to take questions — not even the traditional two from each side. So they each gave lengthy speeches and left.

    But the president achieved something remarkable. He got Bibi to go along with his plan to end the war in Gaza. Trump even said he’d personally head a peace board designed to protect Israel’s security, that Hamas would release the remaining hostages, and mentioned Oct. 7.

    Honestly, it was probably shrewd not to be distracted by questions.

    Here’s the problem: Hamas hasn’t agreed to anything yet, and has stuck by its insistence on a complete withdrawal of Israeli forces before any hostages are released. So the terrorist group is unlikely to agree.

    If Hamas rejects the plan, Netanyahu said, “Israel will finish the job by itself.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Then he said, “we can do this the easy way or the hard way” — apparently unaware that was the much-condemned line that FCC Chairman Brendan Carr used to threaten action against Jimmy Kimmel.

    Bibi also demanded an end to “incitement by the media,” as if he or anyone else could tell the press what to do.      

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  • Special counsel files evidence under seal against Trump in election subversion case

    Special counsel files evidence under seal against Trump in election subversion case

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    (CNN) — Filings from special counsel Jack Smith laying out never-before-seen evidence in the election subversion case against Donald Trump – including interview transcripts and notes from an investigation that counted among its witnesses former Vice President Mike Pence, Ivanka Trump and former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows – are now in the hands of a federal court.

    It will now be up to District Judge Tanya Chutkan to determine how much of that evidence the public gets to see and when they will be able to see it.

    Prosecutors filed the documents under seal as of 4:40 p.m. ET, according to Peter Carr, the special counsel office’s spokesman.

    The court submissions could eventually provide Americans with the most comprehensive view they’ll ever get of Smith’s case alleging that Trump conspired to defraud the United States in his efforts to overturn his 2020 electoral loss.

    The filings are expected to include grand jury transcripts, the FBI’s formal notes from witness interviews and documentary evidence, as part of an effort by prosecutors to argue that their reworked indictment can survive under the Supreme Court’s recent presidential immunity ruling.

    The Supreme Court ruling has required the prosecutors to convince Chutkan – and likely, higher courts – that Trump was not acting in his official capacity when he and his supporters took various actions, culminating in the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol, to stave off his 2020 defeat.

    It is likely the filings will dig into Trump’s pressure campaign on Pence – conduct that the Supreme Court indicated might be covered under immunity. The brief is also likely to lay out what investigators have learned about the circumstances of the January 6, 2021, Ellipse rally, while potentially providing more detail about endeavors by Trump and his allies to convince state officials to block certification of the 2020 results.

    They have also indicated plans to file a version with proposed redactions – also under seal – that could ultimately be posted to the court’s public docket.

    Smith previously secured permission to file a brief as long as 180 pages – four times the normal page length. That brief does not include the “substantial” numbered exhibits prosecutors plan to attach to their arguments that will offer up key evidence. The footnotes alone citing their various exhibits would account for more than 30 pages of the main brief, prosecutors have said.

    The former president vehemently opposed the plan to file the Smith immunity brief now, as his lawyers equated the brief to the types of special counsel reports that aren’t released until after the work of a special counsel is done.

    Chutkan, in a Tuesday opinion explaining why she would greenlight the prosecutors’ filing plan, leaned on the Supreme Court’s own language in its July immunity ruling, which said Trump had absolute immunity for conduct related to his “core” executive branch duties. For other official acts as president, a “presumptive” immunity can be overcome if prosecutors can show that criminalizing such conduct would not interfere with the functions of the executive branch, according to the high court’s 6-3 ruling.

    Chutkan said Tuesday that the Supreme Court had directed her to “conduct a ‘close’ and ‘fact specific’” analysis “of the indictment’s extensive and interrelated allegations.’”

    “It anticipated that the analysis would require briefing on how to characterize ‘numerous alleged interactions with a wide variety of state officials and private persons,’ … and supplementing other allegations with ‘content, form, and context’ not contained in the indictment itself,” Chutkan wrote of the Supreme Court’s ruling.

    Trump will have the opportunity to respond to the prosecutors’ brief with a filing due October 17.

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  • Cory Booker Fast Facts | CNN Politics

    Cory Booker Fast Facts | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Here is a look at the life of Cory Booker, US senator from New Jersey and former 2020 Democratic presidential candidate.

    Birth date: April 27, 1969

    Birth place: Washington, DC

    Birth name: Cory Anthony Booker

    Father: Cary Booker, IBM executive

    Mother: Carolyn Booker, IBM executive

    Education: Stanford University, B.A., 1991; Stanford University, M.A, 1992; University of Oxford, Honors Degree, 1994 (Rhodes Scholar); Yale Law School, J.D., 1997

    Religion: Baptist

    Received a football scholarship to attend Stanford University.

    Became a vegetarian in 1992 and went vegan (no eggs or dairy) in 2014.

    Lived in a public housing complex in Newark called Brick Towers for eight years. The dilapidated building was demolished in 2007, the year after Booker moved out.

    While serving as mayor of Newark, Booker developed a reputation for engaging in personal acts of heroism like rescuing a neighbor from a house fire and chasing down a suspected bank robber. Using social media to connect with constituents, he shoveled snowbound driveways by request and invited nearby city residents to his home when Hurricane Sandy caused widespread power outages.

    Booker was elected mayor as a reformer with a vision to revitalize the struggling city yet high unemployment rates and violent crime continued to plague Newark while he was in office.

    Booker was criticized by the New Jersey state comptroller for failing to conduct oversight on the city’s watershed management program, where corruption was rife.

    1997 – Staff attorney at the Urban Justice Center in New York.

    1998-2002 – Newark city councilman.

    2002-2006 – Partner at the law firm, Booker, Rabinowitz, Trenk, Lubetkin, Tully, DiPasquale & Webster.

    2006-2013 – Mayor of Newark, New Jersey.

    September 24, 2010 – Booker appears with New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and Mark Zuckerberg on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” to announce the Facebook founder’s $100 million donation to Newark schools. The school reform initiative, centered on promoting privately-run charter schools as an option for parents with children in failing public schools, yields mixed results. Researchers at Harvard University conclude that Newark students showed improvement in English but made no significant gains in math.

    December 4, 2012 – Booker begins a week of food rationing to raise awareness of poverty and hunger in America, for the campaign SNAP Challenge.

    October 31, 2013 – Sworn in to the US Senate after winning a special election earlier in the month to replace the late Frank Lautenberg.

    November 4, 2014 – Reelected to the Senate.

    February 16, 2016 – Booker’s memoir, “United: Thoughts on Finding Common Ground and Advancing the Common Good,” is published.

    January 11, 2017 – Booker breaks with Senate precedent to deliver testimony against the appointment of Jeff Sessions as attorney general, becoming the first sitting senator to testify against a fellow sitting senator at a confirmation hearing for a cabinet position.

    August 1, 2017 – Booker introduces a bill to remove marijuana from the federal government’s list of controlled substances. The Marijuana Justice Act would also expunge federal marijuana use and possession offenses from criminal records. The bill is referred to committee.

    August 3, 2017 – Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) introduces the Special Counsel Independence Protection Act. The measure, cosponsored by Booker, would shield Special Counsel Robert Mueller from actions taken by the executive branch to interfere with the probe of Russian interference during the 2016 election. The bill is sent to committee.

    September 6, 2018 – Republicans accuse Booker of grandstanding after he likens himself to Spartacus, a Roman slave who led a failed revolt, during Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.

    December 21, 2018 – President Donald Trump signs a criminal justice reform bill, the First Step Act, into law. Booker endorsed the bipartisan legislation and added an amendment that limits the usage of solitary confinement for juveniles in federal custody.

    February 1, 2019 – Booker releases a video announcing his presidential candidacy. Later, he appears on the ABC talk show, “The View,” participates in multiple radio interviews and holds a press conference in Newark.

    January 13, 2020 – Booker ends his 2020 presidential campaign after failing to qualify for the January 14, 2020, Democratic debate.

    March 9, 2020 – Booker endorses Joe Biden for president.

    November 3, 2020 – Reelected to the Senate.

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  • John Delaney Fast Facts | CNN Politics

    John Delaney Fast Facts | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Here is a look at the life of John Delaney, a businessman, former US representative from Maryland and former 2020 Democratic presidential candidate.

    Birth date: April 16, 1963

    Birth place: Wood-Ridge, New Jersey

    Birth name: John Kevin Delaney

    Father: Jack Delaney, electrician

    Mother: Elaine (Rowe) Delaney, homemaker

    Marriage: April McClain-Delaney

    Children: Summer, Lily, Grace and Brooke

    Education: Columbia University, B.S., 1985; Georgetown University Law Center, J.D. 1988

    Religion: Roman Catholic

    Went to Columbia University on scholarships from his father’s trade union, the American Legion, the VFW and the Lions Club.

    Delaney was one of the wealthiest members of the US Congress when he served as a representative from Maryland, according to the 2018 Roll Call Wealth of Congress analysis, which placed him as the sixth-richest, with a calculated net worth of $93 million.

    The youngest CEO of a publicly traded company when his first company was listed on the stock exchange.

    He practiced law briefly at Shaw, Pittman, Potts & Trowbridge in the late 1980s, after completing law school.

    1990-1992 – Co-owns and runs American Home Therapies, a health care firm, with Ethan Leder.

    1993 – Co-founds HealthCare Financial Partners, a lender to health care companies, with Leder and Edward Nordberg Jr.

    1993-1997 – Serves as chairman of the board, CEO and president of HealthCare Financial Partners.

    2000-2009 – Co-founds and acts as CEO/executive manager of CapitalSource, a lender to small- and medium-sized businesses.

    2010 -2012 – Serves as executive chairman of CapitalSource.

    April 6, 2012 – Resigns as executive chairman of CapitalSource after becoming the Democratic candidate in Maryland’s 6th District race.

    January 3, 2013-January 3, 2019 – US representative from Maryland’s 6th District.

    July 28, 2017 – Announces in a Washington Post opinion piece that he is running for president and will not run for reelection to the House of Representatives.

    May 29, 2018 – Delaney’s book, “The Right Answer: How We Can Unify Our Divided Nation,” is published.

    January 31, 2020 – Delaney announces that he is ending his 2020 presidential campaign.

    September 21, 2021 – Delaney founds Forbright Inc. and becomes executive chairman of Forbright Bank, formerly Congressional Bank. Delaney purchased control of Congressional Bank in 2011.

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  • Tulsi Gabbard Fast Facts | CNN Politics

    Tulsi Gabbard Fast Facts | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Here’s a look at the life of former US Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, who represented Hawaii’s 2nd District and was a 2020 presidential candidate.

    Birth date: April 12, 1981

    Birth place: Leloaloa, American Samoa

    Birth name: Tulsi Gabbard

    Father: Mike Gabbard, Hawaii state senator

    Mother: Carol (Porter) Gabbard, former Hawaii Board of Education member

    Marriages: Abraham Williams (2015-present); Eduardo Tamayo (2002-2006, divorced)

    Education: Hawaii Pacific University, B.S.B.A., 2009

    Military service: Hawaii Army National Guard, 2003-2020, Major; US Army Reserve, 2020-present, Lieutenant Colonel

    Religion: Hinduism

    As a teenager, co-founded Healthy Hawai’i Coalition, an environmental non-profit.

    She is the first American Samoan congresswoman and first practicing Hindu member of the US Congress.

    She is an avid surfer.

    2002 – At age 21, is elected to the Hawaii State House to represent West Oahu, making her the youngest woman ever elected to the state legislature.

    2003 – Enlists in the Hawaii Army National Guard. She completes her basic training between legislative sessions.

    2004-2005 – Gabbard’s unit is activated, and she voluntarily deploys, serving with a field medical unit in Iraq.

    2006-2009 – Legislative aide to Senator Daniel Akaka of Hawaii.

    2007 – Graduates from the Accelerated Officer Candidate School at the Alabama Military Academy. This makes Gabbard the first woman in the Academy’s 50-year history to earn the title of the distinguished honor graduate.

    2008-2009 – Gabbard deploys to Kuwait, training counterterrorism units.

    November 2, 2010 – Is elected to the Honolulu City Council.

    2011 – Founds the film production company, Kanu Productions.

    November 6, 2012 – Defeats David “Kawika” Crowley in the 2nd Congressional District of Hawaii for the US House of Representatives.

    January 22, 2013 – Elected vice chair of the Democratic National Committee.

    August 28, 2013 – Aniruddha Sherbow is apprehended in Tijuana, Mexico, after making threats against Gabbard that the FBI and US Capitol Police “deemed credible.” Sherbow is later sentenced to 33 months in prison.

    October 12, 2015 – On CNN’s “The Situation Room,” Gabbard says she was disinvited from a Democratic presidential debate after voicing a call for more of them.

    October 12, 2015 – Is promoted by the Hawaii Army National Guard from captain to major at a ceremony in Hawaii.

    November 20, 2015 – Calls for the United States to let Syrian President Bashar al-Assad remain in power.

    February 28, 2016 – On NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Gabbard announces her decision to step down as DNC vice chair to endorse Bernie Sanders’ presidential bid.

    November 21, 2016 – Meets with President-elect Donald Trump. “President-elect Trump asked me to meet with him about our current policies regarding Syria, our fight against terrorist groups like al-Qaeda and ISIS, as well as other foreign policy challenges we face,” Gabbard says in a statement.

    January 25, 2017 – Gabbard tells CNN’s Jake Tapper that she met with Assad during an unannounced, four-day trip to Syria. “When the opportunity arose to meet with him, I did so because I felt that it’s important that if we profess to truly care about the Syrian people, about their suffering, then we’ve got to be able to meet with anyone that we need to if there is a possibility that we can achieve peace,” Gabbard says.

    January 31, 2017 – Facing criticism, Gabbard issues a statement saying that she will personally pay for her trip to Syria.

    April 7, 2017 – Gabbard claims she’s “skeptical” that Assad’s regime was behind a chemical weapons attack that killed dozens in Syria though the President, secretary of state and Pentagon officials found that Assad’s regime was responsible for the attack.

    November 21, 2018 – Gabbard refers to Trump as “Saudi Arabia’s bitch” in a tweet after he issues a statement backing Saudi Arabia in the wake of the death of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

    January 11, 2019 – Gabbard tells CNN’s Van Jones she will run for president in 2020, during an interview slated to air on January 12. “There are a lot of reasons for me to make this decision. There are a lot of challenges that are facing the American people that I’m concerned about and that I want to help solve,” she says.

    January 17, 2019 – Gabbard issues an apology for her past comments and actions against the LGBTQ community following CNN reporting that she supported her father’s anti-gay organization, The Alliance for Traditional Marriage. Gabbard had previously apologized in 2012 while running for Congress.

    January 20, 2019 – Gabbard says that she does not regret meeting with Assad in 2017, adding that American leaders must meet with foreign leaders “if we are serious about the pursuit of peace and securing our country.”

    February 2, 2019 – Gabbard officially launches her 2020 presidential campaign at an event in Hawaii.

    October 17, 2019 – In a podcast interview, former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton suggests that the Russians are “grooming” a current Democratic presidential candidate to run as a third-party and champion their interests. The comment appears to be directed at Gabbard, who has previously been accused of being boosted by Russia. In her response, Gabbard calls Clinton “the queen of warmongers,” and concludes, “It’s now clear that this primary is between you and me. Don’t cowardly hide behind your proxies. Join the race directly.”

    October 24, 2019 – Gabbard releases a campaign video announcing that she won’t run for reelection to Congress in 2020.

    December 18, 2019 – Votes “present” on both articles of impeachment against Trump.

    January 22, 2020 – Gabbard files a defamation lawsuit against Clinton, alleging the former secretary of state and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee “lied” about Gabbard’s ties to Russia. She drops the defamation lawsuit in May.

    March 19, 2020 – Ends her 2020 presidential campaign and endorses former Vice President Joe Biden.

    October 11, 2022 – Gabbard announces that she is leaving the Democratic Party. She does not indicate which party she will be affiliated with moving forward but calls on “independent-minded Democrats” to join her in leaving.

    January 9, 2024 – Social media platform X announces a content partnership with Gabbard.

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  • Kamala Harris Fast Facts | CNN Politics

    Kamala Harris Fast Facts | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Here is a look at the life of Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Birth date: October 20, 1964

    Birth place: Oakland, California

    Birth name: Kamala Devi Harris

    Father: Donald Harris, economics professor

    Mother: Shyamala Gopalan Harris, physician

    Marriage: Douglas Emhoff (2014-present)

    Education: Howard University, B.A. political science and economics, 1986; University of California, Hastings College of the Law, J.D., 1989

    Religion: Baptist

    First African American, first woman and first Asian American to become attorney general of California.

    First South Asian American attorney general in the nation.

    First Indian American and second African American woman to serve as a senator.

    First African American woman to represent California in the Senate.

    She is the daughter of Jamaican and Indian immigrants.

    Grew up attending a Black Baptist church and a Hindu temple.

    Her name comes from the Sanskrit word meaning “lotus” flower.

    1990-1998 – Serves as deputy district attorney for Alameda County, California.

    1998 – Is named managing attorney of the Career Criminal Unit of the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office.

    2004-2011 – District attorney of San Francisco.

    2009 – “Smart on Crime: A Career Prosecutor’s Plan to Make Us Safer” is published.

    2011-2016 – Attorney general of California.

    January 3, 2017-January 18, 2021 – Serves in the US Senate.

    December 5, 2018 – Accepts the resignation of Larry Wallace, a senior aide, after accusations of harassment surface from the time that he worked with her at the California Department of Justice.

    January 8, 2019 – Harris’ memoir, “The Truths We Hold: An American Journey,” and picture book, “Superheroes Are Everywhere,” are published.

    January 21, 2019 – Announces she is running for president in a video posted to social media at the same time she appears on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

    October 30, 2019 – In a memo to staff and supporters, Harris’ campaign manager says the campaign will cut staff and expenses to focus on strategy in Iowa. It will lay off staffers in her Baltimore headquarters and deploy staff from New Hampshire, Nevada and California to Iowa.

    December 3, 2019 – Harris ends her 2020 presidential campaign.

    March 8, 2020 – Harris endorses Joe Biden for president.

    August 11, 2020 – Biden names Harris as his running mate, making her the first Black and South Asian American woman to run on a major political party’s presidential ticket.

    November 7, 2020 – Days after the election on November 3, CNN projects Harris is elected vice president, making her America’s first female, first Black and first South Asian vice president.

    January 20, 2021 – Is sworn in as vice president of the United States.

    May 28, 2021 – Harris gives the commencement speech at the United States Naval Academy addressing the 2021 graduating class. She is the first woman to give a commencement speech at the school.

    November 19, 2021 – Biden temporarily transfers power to Harris while he is under anesthesia for a routine colonoscopy. Harris becomes the first woman with presidential power.

    April 26, 2022 – The White House announces that Harris has tested positive for Covid-19. She is exhibiting no symptoms. She will isolate and work from the vice president’s residence.

    May 27, 2023 – Becomes the first woman to deliver a commencement address at the graduation ceremony at the US Military Academy in West Point, New York.

    March 14, 2024 – Harris visits a Planned Parenthood clinic in Minnesota, the first time a sitting US president or vice president is believed to visit an abortion provider.

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  • Speaker Mike Johnson Still Won’t Confirm That Biden Won in 2020

    Speaker Mike Johnson Still Won’t Confirm That Biden Won in 2020

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    Speaker of the House Mike Johnson still won’t admit that Joe Biden won the 2020 election, even as he called suggestions that he was an election denier “nonsense.”

    The comments came in an interview with CBS’ Margaret Brennan that aired Sunday morning, in which she asked the Speaker, who is second in line to the presidency, whether he’d affirm that Biden defeated Donald Trump in 2020.

    “President Biden was certified as the winner of the election, he took the oath of office, he’s been the president for three years,” Johnson told Brennan, while repeatedly maintaining that the Constitution was “clearly violated” during the election.

    “The Constitution was violated in the run-up to the 2020 election, not always in bad faith, but in the aftermath of Covid, many states changed their election laws in ways that violated that plain language,” Johnson argued. “That’s just a fact.”

    After weeks of GOP infighting led to Johnson’s surprise election to the top House job in October, the newly minted Speaker’s leading behind-the-scenes role in the sprawling legal attempts to halt Biden’s victory became an object of intense public scrutiny in the media. Johnson, a constitutional lawyer, had helped collect signatures from more than 60% of House Republicans for an amicus brief supporting a Texas lawsuit claiming widespread election irregularities without evidence. The suit sought to have results voided in four crucial states.

    In his Sunday interview, Brennan presented Johnson with comments from Liz Cheney’s new book, in which the former South Dakota representative argued Johnson had “played a destructive role” in the aftermath of the election. “It became clear that Mike was being less than honest with our colleagues,” Cheney wrote. “He was playing bait and switch, assuring members that the brief made no claims about specific allegations of fraud when, in fact, it was full of such claims.”

    “I don’t spend much time responding to Liz Cheney’s criticism these days,” Johnson replied. “[She] worked with the Democrats on the January 6 select committee to make all of this even more politicized than it was.” The Louisiana Republican went on to claim that he and Cheney “were in constant dialogue” about the amicus brief and that “at one point, she even considered signing” it. (Cheney’s book offers a different version of events.)

    Brennan pressed the Speaker on how he could possibly work with the president if he didn’t believe the 2020 election passed constitutional muster. “This is water under the bridge,” Johnson replied. “I work with President Biden as the president of the United States. I’m trying very hard to ensure that he is only a one-termer, because I believe he has been an abject failure as the commander-in-chief of our country.”

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Mike Flynn’s Hall of Fame induction halted after board resignations

    Mike Flynn’s Hall of Fame induction halted after board resignations

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    Following a flurry of resignations and public outcry, the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame announced it will defer its 2024 induction of Michael Flynn.

    In a guest column to the Providence Journal, Patrick Conley, the Hall of Fame’s past president, stated Flynn’s induction would be deferred “to a more peaceful and rational time and a more secure place.”

    “Discretion is the better part of valor,” said Conley, who currently serves as the board’s volunteer general counsel.

    In the guest column, Conley defended the board’s December 14 vote to induct Flynn, former President Donald Trump’s National Security Adviser. However, he said “the Hall of Fame exhibited ‘poor timing’ by choosing to honor General Flynn in this turbulent and politically charged environment.”

    According to The Journal, at least eight board members have resigned as a result of the vote to induct Flynn. Conley’s column said the Hall of Fame received 100 letters in protest of Flynn’s pending induction.

    Newsweek reached out to Conley via email for additional comments.

    Gen. Michael Flynn, former national security adviser to US President Donald Trump, is shown leaving Federal Court on December 1, 2017 in Washington, DC.
    AFP/Getty Images

    Flynn, a retired three-star general who grew up in Rhode Island, was let go as Trump’s national security advisor after three weeks in office when it was revealed that he was not truthful about a conversation he had with then Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak while speaking with former Vice President Mike Pence.

    In 2017, Flynn pleaded guilty for lying to the Federal Bureau of Investigation about the conversation with Kislyak. Trump pardoned him in November 2020.

    Since then, Flynn has been associated with members of the QAnon conspiracy movement who have made baseless claims that a globalist cabal, made up of Democrats and wealthy businessmen, is involved in a worldwide child sex-trafficking ring.

    He also falsely claimed COVID was invented in order to steal the 2020 election from Trump. Last year, Flynn suggested a Myanmar-like military coup “should happen” in the U.S.

    “A majority of the board that voted to induct Flynn relied upon his 30-year record of public service and high attainments,” Conley wrote in his guest column. “It accepted as true the grant of clemency from the president of the United States asserting that no crime was actually committed and the fact that charges against Flynn were dropped by a weaponized Department of Justice.”

    John Parrillo, a history professor, was among the recent board resignations.

    In a resignation letter obtained by the Journal, Parrillo said he was “saddened to the core” by the vote to induct a man with Flynn’s “politics and far-right militaristic vision for America” and by the board’s unwillingness to reconsider his Hall of Fame merits.

    “For the last seven years, it has been my [privilege] to nominate at least seven Rhode Islanders into our RI Hall of Fame. A fresco painter. A Naval historian. A Hollywood filmmaker. Two creators of a music festival. An early father of the American Industrial Revolution and the creator of at least 14 Black colleges,” Parrillo wrote in his letter.

    “With a most heavy heart,” he said he must resign.

    In another letter obtained by the Journal, former Rhode Island state Senator Bea Lanzi and lawyer John Tarantino wrote: “There is an overall right and wrong in the universe, and what has happened here, in our view, and according to our moral compasses, and consciences, compels us to resign.”