Donald Trump and his allies are trying to appeal to Black voters with overpriced sneakers, fried chicken, past-their-prime rappers and, now, some plain old bigotry to boot.
While the key question of timing in Trump’s immunity appeal looms, consider that the justices have many other cases to decide over the next couple of months.
Donald Trump is lying uncontrollably about the basic details of his ongoing criminal trial. That probably ought to make his sycophantic allies nervous.
Last week, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wanted to talk about Gerald Ford’s decision to pardon Richard Nixon in 1974, but I don't think he's actually read it.
Peter Navarro is staying locked up, after the Supreme Court rejected his bid to stay out while he appeals his contempt conviction.
Testimony in former President Trump’s hush money trial resumes tomorrow with Gary Farro, Michael Cohen’s former banker at First Republic Bank, taking the stand. MSNBC’s Lisa Rubin and defense attorney Jeff Jacobovitz tell us what to expect and what could happen on Thursday, when the judge is expected to hold a hearing about whether Trump has violated the gag order.
Columbia University sent out a letter detailing the school’s decision to not divest from Israel and asking students to voluntarily leave the encampments by Monday afternoon or risk possible suspensions. NBC News’ Antonia Hylton reports on how protesters are reacting to the notice and decision to not divest.
A good question: Why did Gov. Kristi Noem shoot her dog? A related question: Why did the South Dakota Republican admit to shooting her dog?
As a local columnist summarized, the Arizona GOP in 2024 is defined by "an all-out conspiracy kook and a troll farmer-turned-indicted fake elector.”
A "shadow war" over voting access being fought in courtrooms across the country could determine President Joe Biden's re-election.
Did Donald Trump ever talk about killing Americans who upset him during his presidency? Bill Barr's answer to the question spoke volumes.
The “everybody does it” hasn't worked for Donald Trump before. As Lindsey Graham ought to know, it won't work in the hush-money case, either.
Tensions between students and universities continued over the weekend, with many universities saying they support protests but that encampments violate school policy. Joe Scarborough weighs in on the protests.
Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress will want to reverse new rules about coal power plants and other Biden climate change policies if they win in November.