The GOP is, of course, still Donald Trump’s party. His coronation is set for this July in Milwaukee, and Republican grandees continue to bend the knee, saying they will support him even if he is convicted of felonies by a jury of his peers. But the images out of New York, coupled with the latest state primary results, ought to spread disquiet in the party ranks. In Pennsylvania this week, former U.N. ambassador and one-time presidential candidate Nikki Haley got nearly 157,000 votes in the GOP...
Protester Max Azzarello . The 37-year-old doused himself in accelerant before igniting himself with a light. Flames engulfed the conspiracy theorist, who has now succumbed to his injuries
Police named the man who set himself on fire in NYC Friday as Max Azzarello. The conspiracy theorist claimed on a blog post that his 'extreme act of protest'
Max Azzarello, 37,. DailyMail.com obtained three criminal complaints of the August 2023 incidents. He threw a glass of wine at a framed and autographed photograph of
On Tuesday morning, Twitter was down. The issues were happening intermittently, but something was going on at Twitter HQ.
Former President Donald Trump has drawn a difficult jury to defend against, former prosecutor Kristy Greenberg argued to MSNBC's Chris Hayes on Friday evening. "Let's talk about the jury, because we now have 12 jurors and six alternates," said Hayes. "What is your impression — what are your thoughts on how this jury has come together, what the composition looks like?""Well, you have two lawyers on this jury," said Greenberg. "Then you have in addition, three individuals who say close family...
As of April 16, get the Amazon Fire HD 8 Kids Pro tablet for just $99.99 on Amazon. That's $50 off its normal price and a discount of 33%.
This is the horrifying moment CNN hosts watched on as a protester set himself on fire outside Donald Trump's hush-money trial.
Ex-president faces 88 felony counts across four prosecutions as he campaigns for the presidency
Ex-president faces 88 felony counts across four prosecutions as he campaigns for the presidency
Even by National Enquirer standards, testimony by its former publisher David Pecker at Donald Trump's hush money trial this week has revealed an astonishing level of corruption at America's best-known tabloid and may one day be seen as the moment it effectively died.
Documents from Trump's motion to compel in Florida remind of newly significant details of his White House's failure to preserve tweets covered by the Presidential Records Act.