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Articles, Diplomacy, Government

Man of Steel: Trump’s tariffs seek to protect, expand America’s metal industry

Man of Steel: Trump’s tariffs seek to protect, expand America’s metal industry By: President Donald Trump’s orders to impose tariffs and close loopholes on metal imports not only delivered on a major campaign promise to American steel workers, they also set the stage for geopolitical dealmaking that could stretch as far and wide as Europe and the Gaza Strip. Within hours of Trump affixing his signature on the tariffs orders that take effect globally next month, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Tuesday floated the notion that American companies would play a major role in rebuilding his country post-war. It’s one of many potential big markets for U.S. steel and aluminum that could be negotiated by a Trump administration after years of Ukraine enjoying exemptions to prior U.S. tariffs. Zelenskyy is set to meet later this week with Vice President JD Vance, and other Trump administration officials. “Those who are helping us to save Ukraine will renovate it, with their businesses together with Ukrainian businesses. All these things we are ready to speak about in detail,” the Ukrainian leader said. Similarly, Trump kept up pressure on Middle East leaders to come up with their own plan for displaced Palestinians by continuing to suggest the United States was willing to take over and rebuild the Gaza Strip into a luxury resort destination after decades of violence. “We are going to take it,” Trump said of the Gaza Strip during an appearance with Jordan’s King Abdullah II, adding any U.S. rebuilding project would “cherish” the land Palestinians have long occupied. While Arab leaders have been cool to Trump‘s idea, the president’s team has stressed the threat of a U.S. takeover opens the door for some extraordinary dealmaking that could also benefit American companies. “Right now, the only one who’s stood up and said I’m willing to help do it is Donald Trump,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio said during an radio interview Monday. “All these other leaders, they’re going to have to step up. If they’ve got a better idea, then now is the time. “Now is the time for the other governments and other powers in the region, some of these very rich countries, to basically say, okay, we’ll do it,” he said. Such talk is still aspirational since Trump and leaders in the two wars must first reach substantive peace deals. But it also exposes that Trump and his team are playing four-dimensional chess in which domestic and foreign interests are intertwined at almost every step. That notion l is often lost in legacy media coverage that has focused mostly on the potential impact of tariffs on product costs, Trump’s defenders say. “The media is in full meltdown mode after President Trump imposed duties and retaliatory tariffs this week on countries who have been ripping us off for decades,” Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., said. “Both aluminum and steel are critical to our national security — and we make some of the best in the world right here at home. “President Trump’s strategic tariffs will strengthen and revitalize our nation’s economy by making sure our trade deals are fair to taxpayers and the American worker,” he added. Trump’s trade adviser Peter Navarro said the president’s plan not only ends the dumping practices of foreign adversaries like China that exploited exemptions and harmed American steel and aluminum makers, it sets the stage for significant growth for the domestic metals industry. The tariffs “will usher in a new Golden Age of prosperity for two key pillar industries,”  Navarro wrote in a FoxNews oped. Under steel and aluminum tariffs imposed during Trump’s first administration, Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, the European Union, Ukraine and the United Kingdom received exemptions which prevented the tariffs from being effective. China and other nations used these exemptions to exploit trade through backdoor means of commerce, thus undermining the purpose of such exemptions. This time around Trump left no room for that and the tariffs-for-all will go into effect starting March 12, 2025. Trump’s detractors have raised fire and fury over the potential imposition of tariffs with Senators Chris Coons , D- Del., and Tim Kaine D-Va., introducing the “Stopping Tariffs on Allies and Bolstering Legislative Exercise of Trade Policy Act” (STABLE). “Congress gave the president the authority to impose tariffs so that he could combat our enemies in the event of a national security crisis, not so that he could pursue grudges against our allies and neighbors,” Coons said. “If this weekend’s tariffs go into effect, they’ll do catastrophic damage to our relationships with our allies and raise costs for working families by hundreds of dollars a year. Congress needs to stop this from happening again. While tariffs can cost the imposing country’s citizens initially, Trump has used the tool successfully, most recently with Canada and Mexico to coerce security and assistance at our northern and southern borders respectively. And with markets reacting to the tariff proclamation, the price of steel only rose 1.7% under Trump’s last tariffs, according to a federal agency analysis Tariffs could come with not only diplomatic and trade benefits, but revenue as well. With a residual budget gap left by the Biden administration of $1.83 trillion, better trade deals could substantially fill the blinking red coffers resulting from overspending and budgets as balanced as a single-seat seesaw. This isn’t a new concept; between 1798 and 1913 tariffs accounted for some 50% to 90% of federal income. The negotiation tool of tariffs on the European Union takes on a different shape, and it combines the matter of trade with geopolitics. Before the election in September, Trump told a Savannah, Georgia crowd that, “we’re stuck in that war unless I’m president. I’ll get it done, I’ll get it negotiated, I’ll get out. We gotta get out.” Hinting at what could soon transpire through a peace deal, Trump said on Monday that he had spoken to Russian president Vladimir Putin and that “I hope it’s fast. Every day people are dying. This was is so bad

Articles, Government, White House

Trump to sign executive order to keep men out of women’s sports

Articles / Government / White House Trump to sign executive order to keep men out of women’s sports Fulfilling another campaign promise to protect women’s sports, President Donald Trump will sign his fourth EO regarding transgenders. By: After three other executive orders pertaining to transgenders in the military – directives that the federal government will recognize only two genders and banning sex-change surgery for minors – President Donald Trump on Wednesday will sign his No Men in Women’s Sports Executive Order on the 39th annual National Girls and Women in Sports Day. The commemoration began in 1987 as a way to celebrate female participation in athletics. A Gallup survey in May 2023 found that the vast majority of Americans support the requirement that transgender athletes compete in categories reflecting their birth gender. Seventy percent of respondents supported the requirement, up from 62% in 2021. TOP STORIES Trump to sign executive order to keep men out of women’s sports Democrat Dilemma: DEI-driven party elects two white men with beliefs that clash with middle America NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has ‘Abandoned’ Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election LATEST EPISODES Fired! Veteran volleyball coach has been let go from SJSU for speaking up to protect women in sports Democrat governors of border states are ‘non-existent,’ says Border Patrol Council VP, hopes Mexican troops will provide relief Rep. Hamadeh talks airline crash & his support for Kash Patel for FBI Dir., Fmr Kentucky AG Daniel Cameron annihilates DEI Rep. Weber praises Trump’s early border security efforts & retired FBI Exec. applauds Kash Patel for not ‘taking the bait’ Rep. Miller-Meeks unabashedly lays out the very change RFK Jr. can create as HHS Secretary if confirmed by the Senate RELATED ARTICLES Trump to sign executive order to keep men out of women’s sports Democrat Dilemma: DEI-driven party elects two white men with beliefs that clash with middle America NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has ‘Abandoned’ Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts ‘Woke’ Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People ‘Drifting In The Open Sea’ Former Trump Spokeswoman Predicts Democrats Will Swap Out Biden Following His Debate Performance Texas Rep. Nehls Urges Trump Reelection To Restore Safety In U.S Gym Owner Who Defied COVID Lockdown Calls Democratic Governors ‘Foot Soldiers’ In Closing States South Carolina Rep. Norman: Timing of Trump Trial is A ‘Farce’

Articles, Congress, Government

Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde

Articles / Congress / Government Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Clyde said that he didn’t think the Secret Service needed more funding but that their priorities need to be re-examined. By: Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., said that, following the second assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump, House Speaker Mike Johnson called President Joe Biden and demanded more protection for the former president. “Speaker Johnson told us yesterday in a conference that he called up President Biden and demanded of President Biden that he provide President Trump the exact same level of protection that President Biden has,” Clyde said on the “Furthermore with Amanda Head” podcast. On Friday, the House passed legislation that would increase Secret Service protection for Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris. Over the weekend, there was a second assassination attempt on Trump while he was playing golf in Florida. The Secret Service has requested more funding following the second attempt. Clyde said that he didn’t think the Secret Service needed more funding but that their priorities need to be re-examined. “If indeed there seems to be some sort of a funding gap, Congress can certainly address that,” Clyde said. “But I don’t think that’s going to be necessary over the next six weeks.” “If the Secret Service would simply concentrate on their job and do their job for President Trump as well as they’re trying to do their job for President Biden, then I think that the problem would be solved,” he continued. “But it’s the priorities. It’s a reorientation of their priorities. In my opinion, that needs to happen.” TOP STORIES Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He's Complicit In Crimes NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has 'Abandoned' Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts 'Woke' Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People 'Drifting In The Open Sea' LATEST EPISODES Power The Future Founder: 'The EPA is easily weaponized by environmental left; dismantle it & give power back to states' Actor, Filmmaker Sean Stone exposes political agendas in Tinseltown & unmasks media manipulation in new Trump-focused docuseries Ex-Trump Deputy Campaign Chair: First transition ruined by ‘bureaucratic interference,’ now ‘Trump is picking’ his people Restoring Honor: Fmr Acting VA Secretary Peter O'Rourke discusses Trump’s legacy of veteran support & the fight for mental health reform Jack Smith 'committed serious criminal offenses,' says Trump's Attorney, 'if I were representing him I'd tell him to take the Fifth' RELATED ARTICLES Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He’s Complicit In Crimes NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has ‘Abandoned’ Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts ‘Woke’ Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People ‘Drifting In The Open Sea’ Former Trump Spokeswoman Predicts Democrats Will Swap Out Biden Following His Debate Performance Texas Rep. Nehls Urges Trump Reelection To Restore Safety In U.S Gym Owner Who Defied COVID Lockdown Calls Democratic Governors ‘Foot Soldiers’ In Closing States South Carolina Rep. Norman: Timing of Trump Trial is A ‘Farce’ Former Rep. Gohmert Slams Weaponized Justice System, Says Some Judges Abandoned Core Principles

Articles, Courts & Law, Government

Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election

Articles / Courts & Law / Government Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election The DOJ will use it to create a “weapon to alter the outcome of the election and keep political speech from being communicated,” Dan Backer said. By: A lawsuit over robocalls containing artificial intelligence “deepfakes” sent by a political consultant before the New Hampshire primary election may result in the shutdown of communications between conservative organizations, Republican campaigns and their supporters ahead of the November election. A “deepfake” is defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as media “that has been digitally manipulated to replace one person’s likeness convincingly with that of another, often used maliciously to show someone doing something that he or she did not do.” While a political consultant’s use of AI is the focal point of a civil lawsuit over robocalls, a Republican attorney warns that the case, following the federal government’s interest in it, could affect the political speech of organizations and campaigns that Democratic and left-leaning organizations oppose. Steve Kramer, a get-out-the-vote political consultant who has mainly worked for Democrats, previously admitted to media outlets that he had sent robocalls to thousands of state residents with an AI deepfake of President Joe Biden’s voice ahead of the New Hampshire primary election, NBC News reported. The call, which “spoofed” the caller ID to hide its origin, told them to stay home and “save” their votes for the general election. Kramer had a contract with the campaign of Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., at the time, who was challenging Biden. Both Kramer and Phillips’ campaign denied that the latter had any knowledge of the robocall. Kramer has claimed that he commissioned the robocall to lead to regulations on AI deepfakes. “This is a way for me to make a difference, and I have,” Kramer told NBC News in February. “For $500, I got about $5 million worth of action, whether that be media attention or regulatory action.” Kramer has been sued by the state and the League of Women Voters (LWV) over the robocall, while also facing fines from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). In May, the Republican New Hampshire attorney general charged Kramer with 13 felony counts of voter suppression and 13 misdemeanor counts of impersonation of a candidate, based on calls received by 13 New Hampshire voters. After his June bail hearing, Kramer declined to comment as he left the courthouse. His attorney said, “Obviously right now we’re enjoying the presumption of innocence, we’re going to review all the different charges and engage in discussions with the attorney general’s office.” Kramer is separately facing a proposed FCC fine of $6 million for allegedly violating federal Caller ID law by setting up “scam calls” in order “to defraud voters,” according to the federal agency. The FCC is also fining a telecom company involved in the robocalls. On Wednesday, Lingo Telecom, the voice service provider that transmitted the robocalls, reached a settlement with the FCC to pay a $1 million fine. Lingo Telecom also agreed to more thoroughly vet the accuracy of the information provided by its customers and upstream providers and adhere to strict caller ID authentication rules and requirements. Meanwhile, a civil lawsuit was filed by LWV against Kramer in New Hampshire’s federal district court in March, along with telecom and broadcasting companies. LWV argues that “the right to vote free from intimidation, threats, or coercion … was unlawfully infringed upon as a result of the actions and threatened actions” of the defendants. LWV claims that Kramer violated a section of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (VRA) by sending the robocall with “in an effort to intimidate, threaten, or coerce Democratic voters into not voting in the New Hampshire Primary and thereby suppress their votes.” Last month, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a statement of interest in the case, arguing that LWV has “a private right of action” to sue over the VRA. The DOJ wrote that the section of the VRA cited by LWV in its lawsuit “is enforceable by private plaintiffs.” Republican lawyer Dan Backer told the “Furthermore with Amanda Head” podcast last week regarding Kramer that “The League of Women Voters sued him, civilly, alleging that his conduct constitutes a threat under the Voting Rights Act, and that robocalls are threatening. And then the Department of Justice filed what’s called the statement of interest in this case, arguing that, yes, the Voting Rights Act has a private right of action, so anybody can sue, and that robocalls are threats. And by the way, both of these things are just categorically untrue, completely false.” LWV requested a preliminary injunction in April, “asking the court to stop the defendants from producing, generating, or distributing AI-generated robocalls, text messages or any form of spoofed communication impersonating any person, without that person’s express consent.” Backer explained that if LWV gets “an injunction in this case, against Kramer, they’re going to open the floodgates on every Democratic organization in this country going around and saying that any robocall or live call or text message or email or online ad that in any way references election integrity is actually voter intimidation under the VRA, and they have a right to sue under it, and they are going to go nuts.” While campaigns will fight these lawsuits, the telephone companies “don’t care, and so they’re going to be more than happy to shut down, throttle our traffic, demand audits, and otherwise dramatically reduce the ability of Republicans to communicate their political message in the 30 days before the election,” Backer said. Backer told Just the News last Friday that he believes this legal approach is “unreasonable,” since the DOJ will use it to create a “weapon to alter the outcome of the election and keep political speech from being communicated.” Having other organizations pursue these cases rather than the DOJ would make them “more palatable,” whereas if the DOJ prosecuted them, they “could lose those cases down the road.” As for Kramer, according to court documents filed by the LWV “he has no intentions of ever appearing in this

Articles, Government, Security

Texas Rep. Nehls Urges Trump Reelection To Restore Safety In U.S

Articles / Government / Security Texas Rep. Nehls Urges Trump Reelection To Restore Safety In U.S. Rep. Troy Nehls said that the Democrats continue to bring illegal immigrants into the U.S. at the expense of the American people. By: Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, insisted on Thursday that presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump’s return to the White House was vital to restoring safety and security within the U.S. “The American people truly have to understand that if we want to see less of this [and] we want to improve our safety and security for the American people, we must elect Donald J. Trump on November 5,” Nehls said on the “Furthermore with Amanda Head” podcast. Earlier this month, two illegal immigrants from Venezuela were charged for allegedly murdering 12-year-old Jocelyn Nungaray in Texas. She reportedly died by strangulation. Nehls, who represents the border state of Texas, asserted the Biden administration doesn’t care about the people who have lost family members to illegal immigrants. He said that while President Joe Biden and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas say that they care about the families, their policies indicate otherwise. “They’re more in line with getting them into this country….bringing the illegals from everywhere across the globe, and eventually we can get them amnesty, the citizenship, the asylum and eventually registered voters for the Democratic party,” he said. He then insisted that such an operation was part of the Democratic Party’s overall plan and deemed such efforts to be “America Last.” “I’m so glad we got to impeach Secretary Mayorkas because he is garbage,” Nehls said. “He is absolute garbage. But he’s protected by this administration.” TOP STORIES Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He's Complicit In Crimes NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has 'Abandoned' Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts 'Woke' Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People 'Drifting In The Open Sea' LATEST EPISODES Power The Future Founder: 'The EPA is easily weaponized by environmental left; dismantle it & give power back to states' Actor, Filmmaker Sean Stone exposes political agendas in Tinseltown & unmasks media manipulation in new Trump-focused docuseries Ex-Trump Deputy Campaign Chair: First transition ruined by ‘bureaucratic interference,’ now ‘Trump is picking’ his people Restoring Honor: Fmr Acting VA Secretary Peter O'Rourke discusses Trump’s legacy of veteran support & the fight for mental health reform Jack Smith 'committed serious criminal offenses,' says Trump's Attorney, 'if I were representing him I'd tell him to take the Fifth' RELATED ARTICLES Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He’s Complicit In Crimes NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has ‘Abandoned’ Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts ‘Woke’ Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People ‘Drifting In The Open Sea’ Former Trump Spokeswoman Predicts Democrats Will Swap Out Biden Following His Debate Performance Texas Rep. Nehls Urges Trump Reelection To Restore Safety In U.S Gym Owner Who Defied COVID Lockdown Calls Democratic Governors ‘Foot Soldiers’ In Closing States South Carolina Rep. Norman: Timing of Trump Trial is A ‘Farce’ Former Rep. Gohmert Slams Weaponized Justice System, Says Some Judges Abandoned Core Principles

Articles, Courts & Law, Government

South Carolina Rep. Norman: Timing of Trump Trial is A ‘Farce’

Articles / Courts & Law / Government South Carolina Rep. Norman: Timing of Trump Trial is A ‘Farce’ After Trump’s verdict, he raised over $50 million, according to his campaign. By: Congressman Ralph Norman, R-S.C., on Wednesday called the timing of former President Donald Trump’s trial a farce and predicted he would win the upcoming presidential election. “The timing for the whole trial… is a farce,” Norman said on the “Furthermore with Amanda Head” podcast. “It’s a kangaroo court built to shift all the attention to so-called felony counts when again, they haven’t even charged him with anything.” A New York jury found Trump guilty on all 34 counts of falsifying business records during his 2016 presidential bid to conceal a hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels. Trump, who also is the 2024 presumptive GOP presidential nominee, is the first U.S. president to be found guilty of felony crimes. His sentencing date is July 11, just days before he is expected to be formally nominated at the Republican National Convention. “I do think they’ll try to put him in jail,” Norman said. “I think it will skyrocket and he’ll win even bigger. That’s the silver lining in it.” After Trump’s verdict, he raised over $50 million, according to his campaign. TOP STORIES Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He's Complicit In Crimes NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has 'Abandoned' Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts 'Woke' Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People 'Drifting In The Open Sea' LATEST EPISODES Power The Future Founder: 'The EPA is easily weaponized by environmental left; dismantle it & give power back to states' Actor, Filmmaker Sean Stone exposes political agendas in Tinseltown & unmasks media manipulation in new Trump-focused docuseries Ex-Trump Deputy Campaign Chair: First transition ruined by ‘bureaucratic interference,’ now ‘Trump is picking’ his people Restoring Honor: Fmr Acting VA Secretary Peter O'Rourke discusses Trump’s legacy of veteran support & the fight for mental health reform Jack Smith 'committed serious criminal offenses,' says Trump's Attorney, 'if I were representing him I'd tell him to take the Fifth' RELATED ARTICLES Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He’s Complicit In Crimes NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has ‘Abandoned’ Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts ‘Woke’ Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People ‘Drifting In The Open Sea’ Former Trump Spokeswoman Predicts Democrats Will Swap Out Biden Following His Debate Performance Texas Rep. Nehls Urges Trump Reelection To Restore Safety In U.S Gym Owner Who Defied COVID Lockdown Calls Democratic Governors ‘Foot Soldiers’ In Closing States South Carolina Rep. Norman: Timing of Trump Trial is A ‘Farce’ Former Rep. Gohmert Slams Weaponized Justice System, Says Some Judges Abandoned Core Principles

Articles, Courts & Law, Government

Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He’s Complicit In Crimes

Articles / Courts & Law / Government Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He’s Complicit In Crimes “If I was representing Jack Smith, I would tell him to take the fifth when it came to any kind of testimony,” Binnall said. By: Former Trump campaign attorney Jesse Binnall suggested Friday that if special counsel Jack Smith were to take the stand, he should plead the fifth in any kind of testimony. “If I was representing Jack Smith, I would tell him to take the fifth when it came to any kind of testimony,” Binnall said on the “Furthermore with Amanda Head” podcast. I think he committed….in my opinion, very serious criminal offenses.” Some of the offenses Binnall suggested included violation of civil rights in the color of law and conspiracy to violate civil rights. House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, earlier this week demanded Smith preserve all records related to his prosecutions of President-elect Donald Trump. Jordan issued a formal records preservation request to Smith in a letter. The special counsel has brought criminal cases against Trump, though both are expected to end with his ascent to the presidency. Republicans appear poised to retain the House and the subpoena power that comes with majority control. “Unfortunately for far too long, the lawyers at the Department of Justice believe that they themselves are above the law [and] that they can violate people’s civil rights,” Binnall said. TOP STORIES Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He's Complicit In Crimes NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has 'Abandoned' Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts 'Woke' Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People 'Drifting In The Open Sea' LATEST EPISODES Power The Future Founder: 'The EPA is easily weaponized by environmental left; dismantle it & give power back to states' Actor, Filmmaker Sean Stone exposes political agendas in Tinseltown & unmasks media manipulation in new Trump-focused docuseries Ex-Trump Deputy Campaign Chair: First transition ruined by ‘bureaucratic interference,’ now ‘Trump is picking’ his people Restoring Honor: Fmr Acting VA Secretary Peter O'Rourke discusses Trump’s legacy of veteran support & the fight for mental health reform Jack Smith 'committed serious criminal offenses,' says Trump's Attorney, 'if I were representing him I'd tell him to take the Fifth' RELATED ARTICLES Trump Lawyer Suggests Jack Smith Plead The Fifth In Testimony, Suggests He’s Complicit In Crimes NC GOP Chairman Says Democratic Voter Registrations Are Plummeting As Party Has ‘Abandoned’ Values Johnson Called Biden To Demand More Security For Trump: GOP Rep. Clyde Lawsuit, Charges Over AI Deepfake Robocalls May Shut Down Various Political Speech Before Election Ben Carson Blasts ‘Woke’ Pastors, Warns Church Has Left People ‘Drifting In The Open Sea’ Former Trump Spokeswoman Predicts Democrats Will Swap Out Biden Following His Debate Performance Texas Rep. Nehls Urges Trump Reelection To Restore Safety In U.S Gym Owner Who Defied COVID Lockdown Calls Democratic Governors ‘Foot Soldiers’ In Closing States South Carolina Rep. Norman: Timing of Trump Trial is A ‘Farce’ Former Rep. Gohmert Slams Weaponized Justice System, Says Some Judges Abandoned Core Principles

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