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'Trump is the problem' for Republicans in this fading red state: report

President Donald Trump is gradually eroding Republican support in a crucial swing state — indeed, the so-called “Keystone State” itself.

“Michael Pace likes his Republican congressman, yet he is almost certain to vote for his Democratic challenger,” reported CNN’s John King as he surveyed Pennsylvanians in advance of the 2026 midterm elections. He quoted Pace saying that “Trump is the problem that I see. The president is not doing what I think a president should be doing, and that's disturbing to me.” For that reason, Pace argued, he will oppose even a Republican politician he normally likes because he does not want that person to support Trump.

King also reviewed rising gas prices, frustration at the Iran war and the persistent problem of widespread inflation to explain why many Pennsylvanians are turning on Trump.

Discussing Pennsylvania’s wealthiest congressional district (that is, the first district), located in the southeastern portion of the state, King said that “this will be the toughest of the three districts we visited for the Democrats to win from there to the north and the seventh congressional district. Democrats believe: look at the margin last time. They should have a good chance here.”

He then moved on to the eighth district.

“Do the Democrats need to win all three. No," King. "But two of those three, at least, would tell you the Democrats are off to a good start as they try to retake the House. And we'll know that pretty early on on election night, because Pennsylvania is in the east. The polls close early. So can they get two? Can they get three? Are the Democrats having a tougher night than anticipated? We'll know that pretty early on come election night.”

Pennsylvania is so crucial to Republican chances in the upcoming midterms, a dark money right-wing group invested in ads to hurt the candidacy of firefighter Bob Brooks, who was perceived by many as the strongest potential nominee to flip the 7th district currently represented by Republican Ryan Mackenzie.

“By now, you may have seen television ads running paid for by a PAC called Lead Left,” Lamont McClure, one of the Democrats running in that district, told AlterNet in May about the ads. “I want to be clear. I'm running my own campaign and I've never heard of Lead Left before today. Our political system is broken and we have to put an end to all of the dark money being spent on our campaigns. I hope all of the candidates will join me in calling for the immediate cessation of dark money SuperPAC spending on all of our campaigns.”

He continued, “Throughout this campaign at every forum and debate we've had, I have called for a Constitutional Amendment to overturn the Supreme Court's disastrous decision in Citizens United. I renew that commitment today.”

Brooks himself said that the ad was created to sabotage his campaign because the GOP is intimidated by him.

“Republicans are targeting me because I’m the candidate they fear the most,” Brooks explained at the time. “They don’t want to face me in November because they know this firefighter will smoke Ryan Mackenzie, flip this seat, and stop Donald Trump’s cruel agenda.”

Mackenzie, on the other hand, leaned into the ad, with a representative telling AlterNet at the time “all the Democratic candidates are carbon copies when it comes to their radical left policies, but as soon as the DCCC decided to support scandal-plagued Bob Brooks, the dark money started flying around."

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MS NOW unloads devastating supercut of right-wingers mangling Trump’s Iran deal

After single-handedly launching a war against Iran and ballooning U.S. inflation a desperate President Donald Trump has flailed his way into a hasty Iran War agreement that is infuriating his once beholden team of right-wing allies and news media.

MS NOW host Melissa Murray had more than enough video outrage to vent on Wednesday evening, pointing out that “top MAGA and Fox News figures are not being shy about weighing in.”

“They're better off than they were before the hostilities began,” one former GOP lawmaker railed on Fox News.

“I hate to say this in this deal. The biggest loser is the United States and India,” said “Bolling” host Eric Bolling.

“I will say that the early returns do not look wildly promising at this point,” lamented MAGA influencer Ben Shapiro. “… Let's be very clear. This is the vice president's deal. It does not have support.”

“America has given up all of its leverage in this situation,” wailed another Fox News panelist.

“The regime has not changed,” argued former GOP lawmaker and show host Trey Gowdy. “They're just richer! … I didn't believe it. I thought somebody was spoofing me. … How about the guys and gals that bled and died on our country's behalf? Where's their fun? I didn't see that in MOU.”

“I do have concerns about the memorandum of understanding,” confessed former Trump vice president Mike Pence to Fox.

“Unless you were home schooled by a day drinker. No one's confident that Iran’s going to do anything,” said U.S. Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.)

Trump’s high-speed memorandum of understanding would bring his disastrous attack on Iran to a close, but it would also grant Iran $300 billion that would be distributed to that country through an investment fund, and end economic sanctions, and the unfreezing of Iranian assets. Plus, there will be waivers that allow Iran to sell oil on the global market.”

Many of these concessions did not even exist before Trump and Israel chose to attack.

This leads to headlines, that Murray characterized as “absolutely scathing.”

The conservative Drudge Report barked up a distillation of several rotten headlines, including “Iran declares total victory will control Hormuz,” as well as a Wall Street Journal headline declaring “America in retreat.”

The right-wing and heavily influential Financial Times wrote “Humiliation’: Donald trump battles claims his Iran deal is worse than Obama’s” — while the cover of Rupert Murdoch's own New York Post declared: “Lovebomb,” complete with an image of people burning an American flag.

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Advisor warns beaten Trump pivoting back to his war on Americans

Zeteo reporters Andrew Perez and Asawin Suebsaeng say President Donald Trump is now having to admit humiliating defeat in the war he single-handedly launched against Iran, so now he is bitterly back to focusing on ramping up attacks on fellow Americans.

"As [his] failed war in Iran allegedly nears its conclusion, as a humiliating and well-deserved defeat, our authoritarian president is pivoting back to his other unsuccessful war – his assault on Americans," writes Zeteo. “... Trump’s ICE operations are surging, and so are his garbage lawsuits against protesters … One Trump adviser even explicitly told us that it was ‘a good thing’ the president was seemingly trying to wind down his war in Iran, because ‘we need to focus on the terrorists here and the problems we have at home.’”

This, they say, includes American citizens who dare to protest the administration’s policies, with the administration “getting back to bringing ridiculous criminal cases against anti-Trump protesters.”

“The Trump Justice Department, which functions as an arm of the White House, unveiled a conspiracy case on Tuesday against members of ‘a Minneapolis-based direct-action group with antifa ties,’” reports Zeteo, quoting the DOJ. “The case is eerily reminiscent of the DOJ prosecution of the ‘Broadview Six,’ which included former Zeteo contributor Kat Abughazaleh, for allegedly blocking vehicles at an ICE facility outside Chicago.”

The DOJ was forced to dismiss all charges in that case once the judge reviewed grand jury transcripts and found evidence of allegations of prosecutorial misconduct.

As in the Broadview Six case, the DOJ fell back to rote allegations of “conspiracy to impede or injure a federal officer” against some protestors. Abughazaleh posted of the lazy charges, complaining that “the process is the punishment.”

“Earlier this year, sources with direct knowledge of the matter tell us, officials in the Trump Justice Department and elsewhere in the federal apparatus were determined to bring sweeping criminal charges against peaceful protesters and activist leaders in Minnesota,” reports Zeteo. “So far, they’d brought some cases against … activists, but not to the degree that certain senior Trump officials, such as White House policy architect Stephen Miller, craved.”

Administration personnel examined everything from the way Minnesota activists and demonstrators were organizing on encrypted messaging apps, to their liberal use of whistles, despite such accusation being “a tough sell,” according to one administration official conceded to us.

“It’s hard making people afraid of people with whistles," they added.

Nevertheless, Zeteo reports the administration looking to crack down on blue cities across the nation, including New York.

Shock confession: Trump influencer admits she 'fell for Russian propaganda'

One of President Donald Trump’s closest allies, far right activist Laura Loomer, admitted on Wednesday that she had been seemingly tricked by the Russian government.

“When I was deplatformed, and when my election was rigged because the Big Tech social media companies wouldn't allow me to have access to social media, RT started reaching out to me and asking me to come on their show,” Loomer said, referring to her failed Florida congressional run (about which there was no evidence of fraud) and the Russian state-sponsored television network. “And they said, why don't you have a byline on RT? And you can even write for RT?”

Loomer claims she never took money from RT but appreciated that they allowed her to appear on their network. Yet even though she interpreted this at the time as the network perhaps caring “more about free speech than my own country,” she later felt manipulated.

“Now, when I see them say things like, we need to denazify Ukraine and we need to continue our brutal war with Ukraine, while they pretend to be, you know, some Orthodox Christian country — but they're slaughtering thousands, like hundreds of thousands, of young Christians in Ukraine — and then they're supporting actual neo-Nazis in the United States of America by clipping their podcasts, I'm like, wow,” Loomer said. “We fell for Russian propaganda, and I fell for Russian propaganda. And so when Loomer Unleashed had this opportunity to send a correspondent, um, abroad to Ukraine, to be embedded on the front lines of the war and meet with, uh, Ukrainian officials — and there were multiple U.S. senators there at the Odessa Security Conference, um — and Andrew asked me whether I would approve a correspondent to go to Ukraine, I thought about it for a while, and I was really hesitant to do so, because I thought, what are people going to think of me?”

She added that she has been anti-Ukraine for so long without “recognizing how, you know, as a conservative, or as a Trump supporter, or just as an American citizen, how I was being emotionally manipulated by propaganda online. And so I felt a little embarrassed, to be completely honest, sending a correspondent abroad, because I thought, well, people are going to attack me, and they're going to say that I'm a hypocrite, and they're not going to be gracious, and they're not going to give me an opportunity to change my opinion.”

This is not the first recent occasion in which Loomer has split with the Republican’s far right on foreign policy. In May she argued that former Trump supporters like former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), Tucker Carlson, Alex Jones and Candace Owens have “Israel derangement syndrome” by seemingly blaming all the world’s problems on Israel.

“It’s like a psychosis. It’s literally a psychosis,” Loomer said. “It really is Israel derangement syndrome.”

At the same time, Loomer has had outsize influence over American foreign policy during the second Trump administration, such as getting key national security council advisers fired and urging the president to wage war against Iran.

Trump biographer on lookout for the 'literal death watch'

Michael Wolff, the longtime biographer of President Donald Trump, is preparing for the Commander in Chief’s “demise,” he announced on Wednesday. While Wolff asserted that he’s on “a literal deathwatch, as the 80-year-old, obese, sleepless, unfit man, consuming his mortal fast-food diet and overdose of aspirin, seems to do everything possible to kill himself,” he’s also referring to the “downfall” of Trump’s political movement.

“Donald Trump’s end is going to happen,” Wolff declared. “We’re seeing it now. Below the surface of his anger, threats, and bloviation, it’s all coming apart: national fury over the economy, the war, his grift, masked men in the streets, his defacing of Washington, D.C. And, of course, there are his terrible, ever-sinking poll numbers.”

According to Wolff, “He doesn’t retreat; he doesn’t course correct; he only doubles down. We are now seeing his kick-off midterm strategy: he can’t win the election — so he will wage an angry, aggressive, possibly violent campaign against the election itself. As always, it is Trump against the system. He believes he wins, or at least gets a draw, because he is louder, more outlandish, more bilious, more frightening than any response the system can offer.” But as Wolff points out, the president’s cratering poll numbers and growing pushback from Republican lawmakers suggest otherwise.

Wolff is far from the only political insider forecasting Trump’s impending downfall. According to longtime campaign strategist James Carvelle, the president is going to resign by next spring.

“He’s going to walk away because the pain that is coming for him, both the emotional pain and the physical deterioration, you watch it right in front of your eyes,” said Carville on Wednesday. “I don’t have to be a doctor to see this guy can’t move. He can’t get out of a chair. I know what it’s like to be in the 80s. And unlike a lot of people, I know what that job is like, and it’s not compatible. You know, maybe there’s some people 80 who could do that. He’s not one.”

Wednesday brought still more political commentators noting Trump’s deteriorating health and collapsing presidency. According to Atlantic editor and speechwriter to three Republican presidents Peter Wehner, it has become clear that Trump has “entered his decline” as his “regime — and the 80-year-old man who leads it — is breaking apart.”

What’s more, Trump’s “word salad and cognitive confusion” have been on display for the world to see while he’s attended the G7 summit, where his fragile appearance and bizarre actions have prompted Republican political strategist Steve Schmidt to wonder about the president’s “frightening progression of symptoms.”

While Trump’s “aggression, incompetence, and self-destructiveness” are bringing him down, Wolff warns that it “does not mean that Trump ceases to be dangerous.” His health and support may be tanking, but he’s still in office for now, and according to Wolff, “The more threatened he is, the more dangerous he becomes.”

Joe Rogan claims he was targeted by presidents

Podcaster Joe Rogan claimed on Wednesday that he was previously targeted by American presidents for spreading COVID-19 misinformation, although he declined to name names.

“Thank God I was on Spotify and thank God Spotify is not an American company,” Rogan said on Wednesday. “And also it helped that I was number one in, like, 90 countries and not number 90 in one country, you know? That helped. That helped a lot.”

He also said that presidents and former presidents were involved and contacted his employer, Spotify, a Swedish streaming service.

“I can’t even talk about it but there was presidents involved and former presidents involved that were contacting Spotify,” Rogan said. “Oh yeah. Trying to get me removed for vaccine misinformation. Yeah. And it turned out to be right. All of it. Not a single [person] apologized.”

Contrary to Rogan’s claim, the COVID-19 vaccines that he regularly denounced as unsafe have proved to be as effective and advisable to use as other conventional vaccines. Meanwhile his claims that COVID-19 can be treated through alternative methods like taking ivermectin have been thoroughly debunked.

“It was nuts, but it didn’t work,” Rogan said. “But they tried. They spent a lot of money, a loooot of money.”

Rogan is a right-wing streamer who has made the news repeatedly during the 2020s for using his platform to promote President Donald Trump, Trump’s supporters and reactionary billionaires like Elon Musk and Peter Thiel. He also makes scientifically inaccurate claims such as saying that man-made climate change is not a threat to the planet and that the pseudoarcheology promulgated by Graham Hancock is real. Additionally, he has repeatedly used his platform to advance racist ideas, such as saying Black brains are fundamentally different from white brains and that white nationalist politics should be normalized.

More recently, Rogan laughed supportively when former football player Josh Hokit won a heavyweight bout over fighter Derrick Lewis at Trump’s recent birthday bash.

"Shout-out to Trump for having the balls to put some s—— like this on," Hokit initially said, then continuing his monologue by claiming that “lastly, Michelle Obama is a man! Am I right, America?"

That was not the first time Rogan laughed along supportively when Hokit made racist comments about a Black woman. In January he did so after Hokit won a separate UFC match and proclaimed “P.S. Brittney Griner is a man!” Rogan laughed so hard that he struggled to hold on to his microphone.

“Brittney Griner catching strays,” Rogan later chuckled, which he then qualified by saying “she doesn’t deserve that.”

Rogan has also tended to laugh off other comments that others find offensive, such as him lightheartedly dismissing Trump comparing himself to Jesus Christ as the product of him using too much AI.

'Bamboozled' MAGA tears are drowning the internet as Trump 'chokes'

President Donald Trump’s naked capitulation to Iran — the nation he unilaterally attacked — with restitution payments, and surrender on Iran disarmament, has got MAGA voices crying all over podcasts, reports Bulwark.

Bulwark podcaster Tim Miller joined guest Krystal Ball, cohost of “Breaking Points” podcast to watch the waterworks.

“A lot of them are still trying to stay in [Trump’s] good graces, like Ben Shapiro [who] … still wants to kind of like play both sides a little bit so he was being very measured,” said Miller.

“The folks at the commentary podcast were not measured,” Miller continued. “They were very, very upset. … They wanted the war. They thought it was gonna help Israel. They thought it meant that Trump was gonna be more on their side than he had been. It has not worked out how they planned.”

Miller then played two choice clips of “Commentary podcast” co-host John Podhoretz blasting Trump on Tuesday.

“I honestly don't know if it could be worse because if this war ends the way I fear it's going to,” said Podhoretz. “America is going to be in a strategically tactically and militarily worse position than it was under Biden and before Trump came back into power. That is to say, he made a choice to test America's resolve, America's ability to win war, to exert its will, to change the nature of the map, and he has choked, he has chickened out, he has bled himself dry, and better that we shouldn't have done it in the first place.”

“True. No lies detected,” admitted Miller, adding a note that Podhoretz admitted “plainly that the point at the beginning was we are going to exercise our will on the Middle East and change the map.”

Show hosts Eli Lake and Podhoretz then slammed Trump’s motivation for giving Iran and the Muslim nations everything they wanted, allegedly because Trump succumbed to bribery.

“Because they're giving him a plane,” said Podhoretz, to the nodding agreement of show panelists. “Because they're bribing his sons. Because they're bribing his friends' sons. We know this. We all know this. Everybody knows it. But? And when that wasn't having an effect on larger scale policy, by which I mean geopolitical the choices that Trump was making geopolitically — not that you could overlook it because you shouldn't overlook corruption — but it was like they were they were bribing him and he was doing whatever it was that he wanted to do anyway.”

At this, Miller could not contain his bitter laughter.

“It's like Trump was getting bribed. You know it. We know it. Everybody knows that Trump was getting bribed. But as long as he was also doing what Israel wanted, it was kind of like, well, whatever. We'll just kind of look the other way on this for two seconds,” cackled Miller. “But now that he's not anymore, we can all just say it bluntly that Trump is corrupt. It's like, well, no s——. Welcome aboard. Water's warm.”

This podcast is by far not the only grumble coming from the MAGA side, with commentator Erick Erickson saying, “This is an American surrender."

Trump is 'raging' toward his 'ruin' as his regime breaks apart: DC insider

According to the Atlantic, President Donald Trump is “raging” toward his “ruin.”

This is the assessment of Atlantic editor and speechwriter to three Republican presidents Peter Wehner, who noted that there was something appropriately symbolic to Trump’s “garish, lurid, and crass” UFC birthday bash, which Wehner described as “the apotheosis of his administration.”

Writes Wehner, “It was Trump’s version of the Roman imperial games — state-sponsored brutality as public entertainment, staged to please the emperor and his courtiers, desecrating a public space... But the regime — and the 80-year-old man who leads it — is breaking apart.”

Trump’s UFC event, he said, was a manifestation of the president’s second-term goal of ruling without restraint, an impulse that created “something new and frightening: a psychotic state. The administration is consistently detached from reality; the normal policy process we have seen in past administrations is nonexistent in this one. No one around the president even hints that anything he does is inappropriate, unpopular, or unwise… Trump, left on his own without adult supervision, has lurched from blunder to catastrophe.”

Wehner offers a laundry list of examples, from the war Trump lost to Iran, to his fracturing of NATO, to his wide-ranging economic calamities, to his unprecedented self-enrichment. He notes that Trump has “gutted” American medical research capabilities, destroyed its humanitarian missions, weaponized the Justice Department, transformed ICE into a domestic paramilitary force, shredded due process, put “an anti-vaccine activist” in charge of public health, and put “a fool” in charge of the world’s most powerful military.

In response, writes Wehner, “Trump’s approval ratings have cratered. Consumer confidence has fallen to historic lows. Public sentiment is in ‘complete collapse’ on key issues. The mood of ordinary Americans has soured, with many more dissatisfied than satisfied. For the first time, we’re seeing signs that Republicans in Congress may resist the will of the president. And Trump’s MAGA coalition, which until now has been cult-like in its loyalty, is fracturing and turning on itself.”

“And then there is the matter of age.” According to Wehner, there is plenty of behavioral and physical evidence for Trump’s decline: “His need for adulation is more desperate than in the past; the vanity projects are more grandiose. He’s more disinhibited and impulsive. His rage is more easily triggered, and his displays of temper less intentional and less strategic. He’s more detached than ever from reality.” His “meandering soliloquies during Cabinet meetings… The increasing number of deranged, middle-of-the-night Truth Social posts. The fury and indignation at routine questions from the press. And the steady narrowing of his vocabulary, his simplified syntax and reliance on a small number of stock phrases and superlatives.”

Wehner suspects that “what must be especially hard on Trump, a man of renowned vanity, are the signs of physical decay — his bruised hands that makeup cannot wholly conceal, his swollen ankles, his stooped posture and slowed gait, his weight, and his face turning the color of a Halloween pumpkin. It is as if these are the outward signs of inward ruin.”

“This isn’t going to end well,” Wehner concludes. “Trump is seeing the world he has wounded turn against him. He’s discovering that the whirligig of time brings in his revenges. And like another old ruler, vain and volatile, who divided his kingdom and whose reign ended in ruin, Donald Trump is bellowing at the storm, raging at his enemies, raging into the night.”

Steve Schmidt: Today's G7 meeting proves Trump is in serious decline

President Donald Trump is showing signs of serious decline as he approaches his 80th birthday, according to a former presidential aide.

“Vice President Harry Truman was an honest man, but he deceived the country after he had his one and only visit with the 32nd President of the United States Franklin Delano Roosevelt,” Steve Schmidt, who advised President George W. Bush, commented on his podcast on Wednesday. “He knew that Roosevelt was a dying man and he did die on April the 12th, 1945. He was inaugurated for the fourth and final time on January 20th. This matters because Franklin Roosevelt wasn't seen in public every day quite like Donald Trump is. The images of Roosevelt at Yalta are shocking. The war etched onto his face, old before his time, falling apart. The burden of command weighing heavily.”

From there, Schmidt compared Trump to the Roman emperor Nero, who also began to mentally decline during the final years of his reign.

“Look at his decomposition physically,” Schmidt said. “He can barely get out of a chair. He's lost with the European leaders who are redirecting him back into the photo. Does it remind you of anyone? A previous president off-derided by Donald Trump for getting lost in similar photo ops?”

He continued, “Look at Trump's hands. Look at his ankles. The swelling is obviously attributed to a coronary condition. His words slur. He falls asleep. He is poked and prodded by 22 different medical specialists like he's ET at Walter Reed Army Hospital. All of this is to say, J.D. Vance, his fascist understudy, puppet to Peter Thiel, general weirdo and lover of the couch, may soon be commander in chief. We should talk about this more.”

Schmidt is not alone in raising the alarm about Trump’s seeming health decline. Former Tufts University psychiatry professor Dr. Henry Abraham told AlterNet the same thing in May.

“There has been a frightening progression of symptoms,” Abraham explained. “These include grandiosity without moral safeguards, paranoia, impulsivity, vindictiveness, easy misperception of being harmed, moments of omnipotence, uncontrolled rage, and sole control over the use of nuclear weapons in a time of war. As a psychiatrist reviewing these, I can only say Yikes!”

To be clear, the problem is with Trump’s displayed signs of decline and not merely his age.

When President Joe Biden became America’s first octogenarian president in 2022, University of California – San Francisco’s Division of Geriatrics professor Dr. Louise Aronson, a professor told this journalist for Salon at the time.

“There is a legitimate increase in risk of disease, disability, and death with advancing age and that risk varies tremendously among octogenarians depending on their health, opportunities, and function,” Aronson explained. She then added, “to the extent the media focuses on age primarily, they are engaging in ageism. It would be more fair, equitable and ethical to focus more on policy and outcomes, honesty and track record, and so much more.”

DC insider predicts 'fat and unhealthy' Trump is abandoning the presidency

President Donald Trump will not serve out his full second term in office, argues political strategist James Carville, but rather, he will resign and “walk away.”

Carville points to two major reasons looming over Trump as to why he believes the 47th president will exit the office.

“I want to be very clear on something,” says Carville. “I’m not doing this as a crazy a—— prediction. I’m doing it because I genuinely think that he will resign next spring.”

“He’s going to walk away because the pain that is coming for him, both the emotional pain and the physical deterioration, you watch it right in front of your eyes,” said Carville. “I don’t have to be a doctor to see this guy can’t move. He can’t get out of a chair. I know what it’s like to be in the 80s. And unlike a lot of people, I know what that job is like, and it’s not compatible. You know, maybe there’s some people 80 who could do that. He’s not one.”

Acknowledging that he is not a medical doctor, Carville does note that he is close to Trump’s age: the president is 80, Carville is approaching 82.

He highlights Trump’s “rate of decline from Election Day to now,” and warns that “it’s not linear. You don’t lose a quarter of a percent a month. When it goes down, it goes quickly, and you can look at him and see just how fat and unhealthy he is.”

The other reason Carville believes Trump will exit the White House next spring: he suggests a tremendous loss in the November midterms for Trump, and explains how devastating that will be.

“I know what it’s like to lose a massive off-year election,” says Carville. “We did in 1994. It’s so monumental. It’s so massive. It hurts so deep. You just can’t imagine it. The entire world around him is going to change after November of this year.”

“People don’t pay attention to you,” says Carville. “They’re making jokes. Everybody knows you’re on a short leash. You got two years left to go. You don’t have any power. Everybody around you is being subpoenaed for everything that you can imagine. Your life is miserable.”

Carville went on to declare, “I’m doubling down on this prediction. He is just going to walk away.”

Trump, Carville predicts, will tell Vice President JD Vance — who would become president should Trump resign — that as president Vance can likely pardon himself. And while there is “some uncertainty as to whether you can do that,” there is “no uncertainty” as to whether a President Vance can pardon Trump and his family.

“So, I’m sticking with my prediction,” says Carville. “I think the son of a b—— is just going to walk away.”

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Tommy Tuberville sued for not living in Alabama while running for governor

Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R) is being hammered over his residency again, but those arguments are being taken to a whole new level.

In a lawsuit from "Brooke Lynn Dorgan and Justin Jude Le Blanc, as Realtors," sued Tuberville on behalf of the state of Alabama, challenging the eligibility of his candidacy to run for governor.

The suit, which was posted by former Alabama prosecutor and MS NOW legal analyst Joyce Vance, alleges that Tuberville admitted to a group that he wasn't an "everyday resident."

According to the suit, “At a meeting of the Shoals Republican Club on August 3, 2019, Tuberville candidly conceded that he ‘has property’ in Alabama but is not an ‘everyday resident of Alabama,’ describing himself as a ‘carpetbagger.'"

The challenge is part of a larger debate over Tuberville's home, though more recently it has been a party affair. On Sunday, the state's GOP rejected a challenge to his residency from his primary opponent Ken McFeeters.

The state party chair, Scott Stadthagen, announced that a 21-member steering committee ruled in favor of Tuberville on Sunday afternoon, according to the Alabama Reflector.

“We looked at it with the facts. The contest was unsuccessful and Coach Tuberville will be our nominee for governor,” Stadthagen said of the ruling. “I want to make it crystal clear: Under my leadership as chairman of the Republican Party, we will stand on integrity, on strong morals, on truth, and most importantly, we will always do what’s right.”

McFeeters also filed a lawsuit in the spring in Covington County questioning Tuberville's eligibility. County Circuit Court Judge Charles Short dismissed the case in a one-page order that gave no reason, the Alabama Reflector reported in May. The judge did refer to a motion filed by the Alabama Republican Party, saying that it was not the place to have that debate. The party's motion said that they believed Tuberville had been a resident for the past seven years. The Alabama Constitution requires a gubernatorial candidate to be a resident for seven years to run for the top spot. However, Tuberville has served as the U.S. Senator for the state for the past six years.

“Setting aside the reality that McFeeters’s objection to Tuberville’s gubernatorial eligibility is not a fact question for a jury to determine, this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over McFeeters’s complaint as a result of Alabama’s ‘jurisdiction-stripping statute,’” the motion from the ALGOP said.

In early June, Tuberville's lawyers released documents that inadvertently showed he may have committed voter fraud. To prove he was an Alabama resident, Tuberville's team produced seven years of tax documentation and property tax records.

Alabama Reporter journalist Josh Moon questioned why it took so long for Tuberville's staff to produce documentation in his defense when the question has been one that has plagued him for years.

Among the documents were Tuberville's 2018 tax filings, which weren't required since he only has to prove seven years of residency, not eight. The problem is that Tuberville voted in Florida in Nov. 2018 while claiming to be a resident of Alabama, AL.com reported.

"According to records from the Walton County, Florida, registrar’s office, Tuberville registered to vote in Florida on May 24, 2017, and voted by mail in the 2018 general election," Moon reported. "The earliest he could have received a mail-in ballot was October 2, 2018, according to the Division of Elections at the Florida Department of State."

Tuberville's wife and son also voted in Florida that year, the AL.com report said. Suzanne declared a homestead exemption for the Alabama house in October 2018. To get the exemption, you have to claim the house as your primary residence. Tuberville has been fighting over the issue because the homestead exemption wasn't on the Alabama House until 2024.

"That means there is now both a homestead exemption and a tax filing that shows the Tubervilles were Alabama residents when they voted in Florida, after swearing a year earlier that they were Florida residents," Moon wrote. "That seems … not good."

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