Former President Trump's denial of the 2020 election results swung back into focus in the 2024 presidential race after it was raised as an issue by Gov. Tim Walz at the vice presidential debate and by Special Counsel Jack Smith in a new federal court filing.
Bulletproof glass is now standard, and while Donald Trump relived the moment that almost made him a martyr, the threat of political violence increasingly seems mundane.The attempt on his life would have gone unmentioned while on stage with Vice President Kamala Harris last month had he not brought it up himself.
A court in Clark County, Ohio has referred a case brought against former president Donald Trump and Sen. JD Vance to local prosecutors in Springfield.
Trump and Vance do think Congress should outlaw it too. Vance said as much during the vice-presidential debate with the Democratic nominee, Tim Walz. He simply debuted a new euphemism for it, saying he merely supported a “minimum national standard” on abortion. That is just another phrase meaning “abortion ban.”
The Democrat Walz, at times stumbling over his words, laid out his defense for Harris' housing plan, which includes tax incentives to spur more home construction and a $25,000 federal down payment credit for first-time buyers. He also repeatedly took aim at investor homebuyers, blaming them for driving up the cost of housing.
Vance, 40, called out Kamala Harris by name as well as the media for trafficking in "inflammatory rhetoric" against Trump that he contended has culminated in political violence.
Donald Trump is setting aside what are now near-constant worries for his physical safety in order to fulfill what he says is “an obligation."
Fresh off what many perceived as a convincing debate performance, JD Vance was scheduled to make a Massachusetts funding raising-swing this weekend.
TV's Jennifer Borrasso on several issues affecting Pennsylvanians, including the economy, the Nippon Steel deal, what a Trump-Vance White House looks like, and more.
Trump is returning to the site where he almost lost his life in July when a would-be assassin fired at him, killing Corey Comperatore and injuring several, including the former president.
Mr. Vance sanded down Donald Trump’s edges the way he often sharpens attacks for rally crowds — picking the facts that can deliver the most impact and discarding the rest.