• 'He's unwell': Conservative George Conway shows how to use Trump's anger against him

    Lincoln Project co-founder George Conway poked fun at Donald Trump Wednesday, suggesting it was easy for the conservative attorney to trigger the former president."You have an interesting perspective on how thin-skinned Donald Trump is," MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace told Conway. "Your tweets drove him bat s--t crazy.""He can't help it!" Conway exclaimed. Trump, he said, "hate watches" MSNBC. Trump is known for attacking the network as being nothing more than a branch of the Democratic Party. "He...

  • Trump uses courtroom 'soap opera' to drive up 'sympathy, support' and cash: top donor

    Donald Trump's ongoing legal drama has been his most effective fundraising tool, and new data shows his hush money trial could drive up even more small-dollar donations.The data based on campaign finance filing from the GOP payment processor WinRed shows Trump drew substantially more small-dollar donations in the first quarter of this year on days with new legal developments, which his joint fundraising committee has explicitly referenced in fundraising pitches — nearly a third of which include...

  • VIDEO: Stephen A. Smith Apologizes for Saying Blacks Relate to Trump, Then Cites Growing Support for Trump Among Blacks

    Stephen A. Smith apologized Monday for saying that blacks could relate to Trump because the former president has faced legal persecution.

  • Why people support Donald Trump

    “Talented and well-practiced in every vice, a stranger to compassion or empathy, a liar and a cheat so complete in perfidy that he has elevated his dishonesty to hold it up as an ersatz moral principle. Violent, so long as he can order someone else to do the dirty work. Grotesque in body, graceless in […]

  • Trump Is Right to Worry About a Robert Kennedy Candidacy

    Donald Trump said in a radio interview on Monday night that it's by no means certain that Robert F. Kennedy on the ballot

  • On trial, Trump is a shadow of the superhero his supporters crave

    He wants his devotees to see the court case as trial by combat, with him as warrior. But the truth is more patheticSign up for Trump on Trial: a free newsletter on all the latest court developmentsDonald Trump is already in jail. He is pressed into confinement every weekday, except Wednesdays, beginning bright and early, no excuses, at 9.30 in the morning, in the dreary courtroom in Manhattan, where his impulse to mouth off wearies and worries his lawyers, and he must listen, for the first time...

  • Is Max Azzarello a Trump Supporter? Everything We Know

    There has been speculation over whether or not the man who set himself on fire outside Donald Trump's hush money criminal trial on Friday in New York City is a supporter of the former president.According to a manifesto posted online and other apparent writings from the man, identified by police as Max Azzarello of St. Augustine, Florida, it seems that he neither backs Trump or President Joe Biden.He also does not seem to be identified with any major U.S. political party. Instead, Azzarello...

  • Trump presses Republicans for kickbacks when using his likeness

    Trump’s presidential campaign wants other Republicans to pay up, if they use the former president’s name, image or likeness in any fundraising solicitations.

  • Trump presses Republicans for kickbacks when using his likeness

    Trump’s presidential campaign wants other Republicans to pay up, if they use the former president’s name, image or likeness in any fundraising solicitations.

  • Three Moments From Donald Trump's Trial That He'll Love

    The second day of former President Donald Trump's criminal trial in Manhattan has officially wrapped, and Tuesday proved to have some better moments for Trump than the first.Trump on Monday became the first current or former president to stand trial on criminal charges. He faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the payment of hush money to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels, accused of concealing information from voters ahead of the 2016 presidential election. Trump has pleaded...

  • The moments multiple drivers were caught using their mobile phones

    A Range Rover driver and several other motorists were reported by fellow drivers to Warwickshire Police

    • MSNBC

    Teens use day off from school to attend Trump trial

    MSNBC's Chris Jansing spoke to two New York teens, Hope Harrington and Owen Berenbom, who decided to attend former President Donald Trump's hush money trial. The students talked about why they wanted to be at court, with Harrington saying she wants to be a lawyer, and their takeaways from the arguments and testimony they heard.