• Trump should risk arrest and attend son's graduation, Piers Morgan says, force Dems into 'political suicide'

    After New York Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan told former President Trump he would face arrest if he did not attend daily court sessions in his hush money trial, Fox Nation host Piers Morgan said the presumptive GOP presidential candidate should attend his son Barron's graduation, and challenge the judge's warning. "Donald Trump should go to his son's graduation go to the graduation. Honestly, if you're watching, President Trump, just go to the graduation. Every parent in America, whether...

  • Melania Trump's former press secretary claims Hope Hicks and Sarah Sanders called to see how the first lady was 'dealing' with Karen McDougal affair rumors but didn't share details of the National Enquirer 'deal'

    Stephanie Grisham made revealation during Pecker's testimony in Trump trial. 'Funny, they'd call me a lot to find out how MT was reacting to all the Clifford/McDougal news, but didn't bother to share any of this,' she said. Follow DailyMail.com's live blog of Trump's trial

  • Trump's Fate Could Be Determined This Week

    The Democrats' lawfare strategy against Donald Trump may be thwarted this week, as the Supreme Court is poised to hear arguments on Trump's case on presidential immunity on Thursday, which could affect several of Trump's trials.

    • Axios

    Supreme Court to decide Trump's fate — and its own

    There's more on the line on Thursday at the Supreme Court than in any other

    • KTVZ

    Opinion: The world rushes to court Trump

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis (CNN) — The streets in Washington, D.C., were festooned with flags of Japan in recent days, as the United States bestowed one of its rarest of honors, a lavish state dinner, on visiting Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, a chance to reaffirm and strengthen bonds between two key allies. Meanwhile, at Mar-a-Lago, a parallel gathering of future-focused faux diplomacy

    • KEYT

    Opinion: The world rushes to court Trump

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis (CNN) — The streets in Washington, D.C., were festooned with flags of Japan in recent days, as the United States bestowed one of its rarest of honors, a lavish state dinner, on visiting Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, a chance to reaffirm and strengthen bonds between two key allies. Meanwhile, at Mar-a-Lago, a parallel gathering of future-focused faux diplomacy

    • KIFI

    Opinion: The world rushes to court Trump

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis (CNN) — The streets in Washington, D.C., were festooned with flags of Japan in recent days, as the United States bestowed one of its rarest of honors, a lavish state dinner, on visiting Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, a chance to reaffirm and strengthen bonds between two key allies. Meanwhile, at Mar-a-Lago, a parallel gathering of future-focused faux diplomacy

  • Dems bank on Trump trial boosting Biden

    Democrats are hopeful that President Biden's freedom to hit the campaign trail while former President Trump is stuck in a New York courtroom for weeks, maybe months, gives his reelection campaign a jolt. The president is spending several days this week covering crucial ground in Pennsylvania, including a visit to his hometown, while Trump sits []

  • Trump faces political risks as trial begins

    As Donald Trump the candidate overlaps with Donald Trump the defendant, new polling finds that many crucial independent voters consider his trial to be a serious issue. NBC News' Hallie Jackson reports.

  • Dems roast Trump for appearing to sleep in court

    Democratic strategists are roasting former President Trump on Monday for appearing to fall asleep in a New York courtroom during the first day of his hush money trial.

  • Here's what we know about the 12 people who will decide Trump's fate

    The panel consists of seven men and five women who represent a

  • Mary Trump: My uncle has 'no control' over his future — and it's freaking him out

    Former President Donald Trump's niece, psychologist Mary Trump, shredded her uncle in a new email blast analyzing exactly why she believes the criminal hush money trial which began this week is such a problem for him — not just legally, but emotionally."No doubt Donald feels as though he’s being singled out for extraordinary punishment, but that’s because he has so rarely been in a situation in which he has no control over either the narrative or the proceedings," she wrote. "Because this is a...