Trump Loses Block on Tax Returns from House Panel

Trump Loses Block on Tax Returns from House Panel Trump Loses Block on Tax Returns from House Panel Former President Donald Trump arrives at the 'Save America' rally in Robstown, Texas. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

By Brian Pfail | Thursday, 27 October 2022 07:10 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump's appeal blocking the disclosure of his tax returns has been rejected.

The House Ways and Means Committee will obtain Trump's financial documents, although he can petition the Supreme Court to step in.

The committee requested the court to expedite, via "mandate," a formal conclusion to the case allowing lawmakers to obtain the documents quicker.

The court denied the committee's request and Trump's to delay the mandate until after he had the opportunity to go to the Supreme Court. Still, it is unclear whether the court would authorize the mandate.

"The law has always been on our side," Democrat Richard Neal, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said in an emailed statement. "We’ve waited long enough – we must begin our oversight of the IRS's mandatory presidential audit as soon as possible.”

Neal is pursuing six years of Trump’s return from the Internal Revenue Service. A 1924 law allows leaders of the three tax committees in Congress to request the US Treasury for the returns of any taxpayer.

Trump’s Treasury Department refused to comply, leading the committee to file suit. Under the Biden administration, the Justice Department directed the Treasury to release the tax returns to Congress. Trump then sued to block the release.

Last year, the Supreme Court ruled that Trump's taxes could be released to a Manhattan prosecutor. Separately, lower courts were asked to review the requests as "no broader than reasonably necessary."

Trump has declined to release his taxes while serving as president and during his campaign. Although presidents or candidates are not required to do so, it has been a common practice.

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Original Article

Pres. Trump receives subpoena from Jan. 6th Committee

WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 13: Members of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol vote unanimously to subpoena former President Donald Trump during a hearing in the Cannon House Office Building on October 13, 2022 in Washington, DC. The bipartisan committee, in possibly its final hearing, has been gathering evidence for almost a year related to the January 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol. On January 6, 2021, supporters of former President Donald Trump attacked the U.S. Capitol Building during an attempt to disrupt a congressional vote to confirm the electoral college win for President Joe Biden. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON, DC – OCTOBER 13: Members of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol vote unanimously to subpoena former President Donald Trump during a hearing in the Cannon House Office Building on October 13, 2022 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 11:30 AM PT – Thursday, October 27, 2022

45th President Donald J. Trump has received a subpoena from the January 6th Committee.

On Wednesday, Trump’s attorneys confirmed they accepted the summons. The summons are demanding documents and testimony from the former president.

This comes after the panel unanimously voted to subpoena Trump during its last public hearing.

Trump has until November 14th to comply. He must testify in front of the committee at the Capitol or via video conference. It is unclear what will occur if he fails to cooperate.
The 45th president has repeatedly criticized the January 6th Committee, recently calling it a “laughing stock”

Original Article Oann

Biden Moves to Reverse Trump’s Sea-launched Nuclear Cruise Missile Program

Biden Moves to Reverse Trump's Sea-launched Nuclear Cruise Missile Program (Newsmax)

By Luca Cacciatore | Thursday, 27 October 2022 04:57 PM EDT

President Joe Biden's administration is attempting to end the military development of some sea-launched nuclear missiles first ordered under former President Donald Trump.

The decision, revealed Thursday in 2022's National Defense Strategy, comes despite recommendations from top Pentagon officials to maintain the program, which was initiated in 2018 to assist W76 submarine-launched ballistic missiles.

"We concluded SLCM-N [sea-launched cruise missile program] was no longer necessary given the deterrence contribution of the W76-2, uncertainty regarding whether SLCM-N on its own would provide leverage to negotiate arms control limits on Russia's NSNW [non-strategic nuclear weapons]," the report read.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin defended the move during a press briefing on Thursday, arguing that the U.S. nuclear weapons inventory is already solid and that adding sea-launched cruise missiles into the mix was unnecessary, The Hill reported.

"We determined, as we looked at our inventory, that we did not need that capability. We have a lot of capability in our nuclear inventory," Austin stated, adding that Russian President Vladimir Putin "understands what our capability is."

The news comes as the Biden administration has been under heavy criticism from congressional Republicans for its cutbacks to national defense.

Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, specifically revealed to Newsmax's "Rob Schmitt Tonight" last week that "it's a sort of secret in Washington our defense industrial base is broken."

"A lot of it has to do with production," the top-ranked Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee stated. "They don't have the parts to, say, go to SpaceX or go to make F-35s or to make our advanced weapon systems. It's a real problem right now.

"The military sale issue is probably the biggest threat to our national security right now," he emphasized.

Original Article

DOJ Cracking Down on Threats to Poll Workers

DOJ Cracking Down on Threats to Poll Workers (Newsmax)

By Jack Gournell | Thursday, 27 October 2022 04:46 PM EDT

The Justice Department is making efforts to ensure that election workers feel safe during the Nov. 8 midterm elections amid unprecedented threats to their safety.

"Threats to election workers not only threaten the safety of the individuals concerned, but also jeopardize the stability of the US electoral process," the FBI said in a news release on Oct. 12.

The DOJ has received growing reports from election workers of threatening voicemails, online messages, and in-person encounters since former President Donald Trump began making public statements that the 2020 presidential election was "stolen" from him, CNBC reports.

"These threats against election officials continue," Michael McDonald, professor of political science at the University of Florida, told CNBC. "It's straining and stressing election officials. And in some cases, they are opting to retire from running elections."

Claims of intimidation began immediately after the election when Trump and his legal team began making claims of election fraud. Most were in key swing states such as Georgia and Arizona where the election was close.

The Georgia Secretary of State's chief operating officer Gabriel Sterling, a Republican, testified before the Jan. 6 committee in June that one state election worker received a threat to be "hung for treason" for transferring an election report to a county computer.

Former Georgia election worker Wandrea ArShaye "Shaye" Moss, a Democrat, told the committee that she and her mother had been subjected to racist threats after false accusations of election tampering.

"It's affected my life in a major way. In every way. All because of lies," Moss said. "From me doing my job, the same thing I've been doing forever."

The threats continue, according to elected officials and poll workers, who say they continued getting threats right up to the present.

Just this month, a 64-year-old man was arrested for threatening election officials in Maricopa County, Arizona, CNBC reported. Maricopa was a major focus of the 2020 state recount that Trump lost by 10,000 votes.

"When we come to lynch your stupid lying commie [expletive], you'll remember that you lied on the [expletive] Bible, you piece of [expletive]. You're gonna die, you piece of [expletive]. We're going to hang you. We're going to hang you," the man allegedly told Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich in a Sept. 27, 2021 voicemail, the DOJ reports.

The DOJ is offering more funds this year for election security, Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Polite Jr., said in a briefing to election officials and workers this month.

More federal grant money has been allocated for poll safety and money from the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan is available to be used to protect election workers, Polite told the group.

Original Article

Trump Lawyers Meet with DOJ in Sealed Court Hearing

Trump Lawyers Meet with DOJ in Sealed Court Hearing (Newsmax)

By Brian Pfail | Thursday, 27 October 2022 04:11 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump's attorneys met with prosecutors spearheading the Mar-a-Lago documents investigation Thursday morning in Washington, D.C.

The attorneys for Trump, prosecutor Julie Edelstein, and several attorneys from the Justice Department were seen heading into a proceeding before Chief Judge Beryl Howell.

Although the seizure took place in Florida, prosecutors met in D.C. probably to utilize a vastly more left-leaning population for a grand jury, as CNN alluded to.

Trump has repeatedly challenged the search and seizure at Mar-a-Lago. In August he made his case before judges in Florida, but it appears a federal grand jury in D.C. is handling the criminal investigation into obstruction of justice and mishandling of records, including national security secrets.

A close adviser to Trump, Kash Patel, was designated to work with the records. Two weeks prior, he appeared before the grand jury and plead the Fifth Amendment, declining to answer.

The Justice Department has also been demanding sensitive materials in Trump's possession be returned to the federal government. Some of the documentation is part of an under-seal court proceeding.

Original Article

Special Counsel Slaps Biden Chief of Staff Klain With Hatch Act Warning

Special Counsel Slaps Biden Chief of Staff Klain With Hatch Act Warning

(Newsmax/"National Report")

By Jay Clemons | Thursday, 27 October 2022 03:38 PM EDT

White House chief of staff Ron Klain has been issued a warning from the Office of Special Counsel regarding an apparent rules violation that prohibits federal government officials from engaging in campaign activity while actively holding their position.

According to the OSC, Klain retweeted a May post from a Democratic political committee, which could be construed as a possible violation of the Hatch Act.

The Hill reports that May message included information about "infant formula deliveries," but also featured a call to purchase Democratic-branded merchandise.

The ​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Hatch Act of 1939 limits certain political activities of federal employees — along with some state, District of Columbia and local government officials — who work in connection with federally funded programs. ​

The law's intended purposes are to "ensure that federal programs are administered in a nonpartisan fashion, to protect federal employees from political coercion in the workplace and to ensure that federal employees are advanced based on merit and not based on political affiliation.​​​"

Forbes says the Hatch Act is a relatively "obscure" law on the American books.

According to Forbes, the law's origins involved officials working in President Franklin Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration being accused of offering "agency jobs in exchange for votes in a Kentucky Senate election, lawmakers rushed to codify anti-patronage rules through the Hatch Act, which, in short, aims to ensure that government works for all Americans, not just the politically connected or empowered."

During the Trump administration, Forbes also reports that five White House officials — chief of staff Mark Meadows, deputy chief of staff Dan Scavino, Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff Marc Short, senior adviser Ivanka Trump and senior counselor Kellyanne Conway — were accused of committing Hatch Act violations.

Regarding Klain's case, America First Legal, a conservative legal group led by former Trump White House aide Stephen Miller, initially informed the OSC about Klain's conduct on Twitter.

After investigating the matter, the OSC revealed that Klain rescinded his Twitter post, but still received a warning from the agency.

"Ron is very careful and takes the Hatch Act very seriously in his media appearances and his use of Twitter, but he got it wrong this time and he tweeted something that was political," White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre recently told reporters aboard Air Force One.

"He fixed it as soon as it was pointed out, and takes the warning to be more careful seriously. That’s very different than the prior crew here at the White House before us previously that blatantly, openly and carelessly violated the Hatch Act repeatedly," Jean-Pierre added.

Original Article

Pentagon Defends Strategy to Cut 2 Nuclear Programs

Pentagon Defends Strategy to Cut 2 Nuclear Programs (Newsmax)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Thursday, 27 October 2022 03:02 PM EDT

The Pentagon released its latest National Defense Strategy Thursday, outlining a policy that calls for more deterrence and focuses largely on the growing threats posed by Russia and China, but defended its plans to cut U.S. nuclear capabilities through the elimination of two programs.

The document, now released in its declassified form after having been given to Congress in March, shows the United States is planning to discontinue the B83-1 gravity bomb, which is delivered by nuclear aircraft and does not contain a guidance system, as well as the nuclear-armed Sea-Launched Cruise Missile (SLCM-N) program, reports Fox News.

When asked why the programs were being cut as Russian President Vladimir Putin threatens the use of nuclear weapons in the war with Ukraine, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said the U.S. "inventory of nuclear weapons is significant" and he does not think the cuts send a message to Putin, because "he understands what our capability is."

Austin also described Putin as "reckless" and called him the largest threat to Europe since World War II, but still, unlike China, "Russia cannot systemically challenge the United States in the long term."

However, he said Russian aggression "does pose an immediate and sharp threat to our interests and values."

The document talks about Russia being armed with 2,000 tactical nuclear weapons, but not being limited by treaties that would keep those numbers from rising, reports The New York Times.

It then raises the possibility that Russia, under President Vladimir Putin, "would use these forces to try to win a war on its periphery or avoid defeat if it was in danger of losing a conventional war."

Concerning China, the document outlines the country's plans to expand its nuclear arsenal to reach about 1,000 strategic weapons in upcoming years, and says the growing consideration of nuclear weapons for both countries "heightens the risks."

The new document reviews the nuclear arsenal and missile defenses of the United States as well.

The last defense strategy was published in 2018 by the Trump administration and was the first since the Cold War ended to refocus defenses on China and Russia. President Joe Biden's document, though, expands on that description, calling China a "pacing" challenger through technological and military advances, and Russia as a declining power but still an "acute" threat.

The document is used to guide the Pentagon's policy and budget decisions on the development of weapons and the capabilities of the armed forces, among other issues, but this time, the defense strategy under Biden differs from the document issued when he was vice president to President Barack Obama.

In that one, the strategy called for drastic cuts to the role of nuclear weapons to defend the United States, and called for shared efforts with Russia and China to both keep Iran from building nuclear weapons and to contain the threat from North Korea.

"The P.R.C. [People's Republic of China] and Russia now pose more dangerous challenges to safety and security at home, even as terrorist threats persist," the document released Thursday read.

The strategy also points out both countries have "space-based capabilities that support military power and daily civilian life."

Congress in March, upon receiving the classified version of the strategy, released its 2-page fact sheet summarizing the contents. The unclassified version out Thursday runs almost 80 pages long and was delayed earlier this month when the administration announced its national security strategy, with Biden specifying he was more concerned about China than Russia.

In the Pentagon's document, hypersonic weapons, advanced chemical and biological weapons, and new and emerging warheads were listed as particular threats.

"The department will focus on deterring Russian attacks on the United States, NATO members, and other allies, reinforcing our ironclad treaty commitments, to include conventional aggression that has the potential to escalate to nuclear employment of any scale," the new document said.

Original Article

Pentagon Defends Strategy to Cut 2 Nuclear Programs

Pentagon Defends Strategy to Cut 2 Nuclear Programs (Newsmax)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Thursday, 27 October 2022 03:02 PM EDT

The Pentagon released its latest National Defense Strategy Thursday, outlining a policy that calls for more deterrence and focuses largely on the growing threats posed by Russia and China, but defended its plans to cut U.S. nuclear capabilities through the elimination of two programs.

The document, now released in its declassified form after having been given to Congress in March, shows the United States is planning to discontinue the B83-1 gravity bomb, which is delivered by nuclear aircraft and does not contain a guidance system, as well as the nuclear-armed Sea-Launched Cruise Missile (SLCM-N) program, reports Fox News.

When asked why the programs were being cut as Russian President Vladimir Putin threatens the use of nuclear weapons in the war with Ukraine, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said the U.S. "inventory of nuclear weapons is significant" and he does not think the cuts send a message to Putin, because "he understands what our capability is."

Austin also described Putin as "reckless" and called him the largest threat to Europe since World War II, but still, unlike China, "Russia cannot systemically challenge the United States in the long term."

However, he said Russian aggression "does pose an immediate and sharp threat to our interests and values."

The document talks about Russia being armed with 2,000 tactical nuclear weapons, but not being limited by treaties that would keep those numbers from rising, reports The New York Times.

It then raises the possibility that Russia, under President Vladimir Putin, "would use these forces to try to win a war on its periphery or avoid defeat if it was in danger of losing a conventional war."

Concerning China, the document outlines the country's plans to expand its nuclear arsenal to reach about 1,000 strategic weapons in upcoming years, and says the growing consideration of nuclear weapons for both countries "heightens the risks."

The new document reviews the nuclear arsenal and missile defenses of the United States as well.

The last defense strategy was published in 2018 by the Trump administration and was the first since the Cold War ended to refocus defenses on China and Russia. President Joe Biden's document, though, expands on that description, calling China a "pacing" challenger through technological and military advances, and Russia as a declining power but still an "acute" threat.

The document is used to guide the Pentagon's policy and budget decisions on the development of weapons and the capabilities of the armed forces, among other issues, but this time, the defense strategy under Biden differs from the document issued when he was vice president to President Barack Obama.

In that one, the strategy called for drastic cuts to the role of nuclear weapons to defend the United States, and called for shared efforts with Russia and China to both keep Iran from building nuclear weapons and to contain the threat from North Korea.

"The P.R.C. [People's Republic of China] and Russia now pose more dangerous challenges to safety and security at home, even as terrorist threats persist," the document released Thursday read.

The strategy also points out both countries have "space-based capabilities that support military power and daily civilian life."

Congress in March, upon receiving the classified version of the strategy, released its 2-page fact sheet summarizing the contents. The unclassified version out Thursday runs almost 80 pages long and was delayed earlier this month when the administration announced its national security strategy, with Biden specifying he was more concerned about China than Russia.

In the Pentagon's document, hypersonic weapons, advanced chemical and biological weapons, and new and emerging warheads were listed as particular threats.

"The department will focus on deterring Russian attacks on the United States, NATO members, and other allies, reinforcing our ironclad treaty commitments, to include conventional aggression that has the potential to escalate to nuclear employment of any scale," the new document said.

Trump Pushes Back on NY AG ‘Nationalizing’ Trump Organization

Trump Pushes Back on NY AG 'Nationalizing' Trump Organization (Newsmax)

By Brian Pfail | Thursday, 27 October 2022 02:13 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump is opposing New York Attorney General Letitia James' request for an independent monitor to oversee the submission of financial statements to third parties by the Trump organization, according to recent court filings.

James has requested for a judge to name a watchdog who would review the financial records of the Trump organization and those in connection — lenders, insurers and accountants — pending the lawsuit's outcome.

The September lawsuit accuses Trump, three of his adult children, their organization and others of decade-long fraud.

Trump's lawyers responded to the request, saying it was "a politically motivated attempt to nationalize a highly successful private enterprise."

James' suit accuses the former president and the Trump Organization of misstating the value of certain real estate assets and his net worth on financial statements used to grant him loans, as well as secure insurance policies and tax benefits.

She claims Trump overstated his net worth by billions of dollars, and now she calls on federal prosecutors in Manhattan and the IRS to review the case for possible federal crimes. James said she obtained substantial evidence during her three-year civil probe of Trump, indicating possible crimes of bank fraud and false statements to financial institutions.

The attorney general is seeking $250 million in penalties.

In the filing, Trump's lawyers claim James is making "a bill of grievances based on nothing more than a misapplication of standard accounting principles and gross exaggeration of routine valuation differences between counterparties to complex commercial lending transactions."

The filing also states the requested monitor would have "staggeringly overbroad" powers because the individual would have access to "all of Trump Parties' financial records, compelling the Trump Parties to make onerous informational disclosures to the monitor, and grant the monitor operational oversight over the financial affairs of private business."

Trump lawyers claim James' request for such oversight "would effectively allow the NYAG to nationalize the Trump business empire."

Original Article

Rep. Scott Perry Files Motion to Drop DOJ Cellphone Data Lawsuit

Rep. Scott Perry Files Motion to Drop DOJ Cellphone Data Lawsuit (Newsmax)

By Nicole Wells | Thursday, 27 October 2022 01:55 PM EDT

Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., an ally of former President Donald Trump, filed a motion Wednesday to drop his lawsuit against the Department of Justice (DOJ) over his seized cellphone data.

The court filing did not give a reason for seeking the suit's dismissal, but comes after a late August request for more time to negotiate with the Justice Department, according to The Hill.

The FBI confiscated Perry's phone in August while he was on vacation with his family in an effort to determine if, or to what extent, Perry was involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, breach of the Capitol building. It was returned the same day after agents copied the data.

The Keystone State congressman maintained there was sensitive information on his phone, which was covered by the Constitution's speech and debate clause. The clause grants lawmakers legal protections for actions taken as part of their job.

He also said his phone contained information shielded by marital and attorney-client privilege, according to The Hill.

Perry rejected an offer by the DOJ to review the phone's contents jointly provided he waived any speech or debate clause protections, according to a court filing from early August. Another motion from later that month, however, requested more time to "allow the parties to further discuss the possibility of resolving" the matter.

According to NBC News, the House Jan. 6 committee has claimed it has evidence "from multiple witnesses" about Perry's involvement in an effort to appoint former DOJ official Jeffrey Clark to the position of acting attorney general during Trump's final months as president. Clark had promoted Trump's theory of a stolen 2020 presidential election and wanted the DOJ to investigate the results.

Original Article

Ted Cruz Joins Herschel Walker on Campaign Trail

Georgia GOP Sen. Candidate Walker Gets Texas Sen. Cruz On Campaign Trail (Newsmax)

By Solange Reyner | Thursday, 27 October 2022 12:18 PM EDT

GOP Senate candidate Herschel Walker of Georgia, plagued by allegations he pressured two women into having an abortion, will be joined on the campaign trail this week by Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, reports CNN.

Walker on Thursday denied the new claim, which dropped less than two weeks before the midterm elections. He is in a tight race against incumbent Democrat Sen. Raphael Warnock.

"Anyone who believes I am coming forward because Herschel is running as a Republican candidate — that is simply not the case. I am a registered independent, and I voted for Donald Trump in both elections," the anonymous woman, who claims she met Walker in the 1980s and became pregnant in 1993, said during a press conference over Zoom. "I do not believe that Herschel is morally fit to be a U.S. senator. And that is the reason why I am speaking up."

Walker responded during a campaign stop: "I'm done with this foolishness. I've already told people this is a lie, and I'm not going to entertain, continue to carry a lie along."

Walker earlier this year was accused by a former girlfriend of encouraging her to have an abortion and then reimbursing her for the cost.

The same woman also alleged that Walker asked her to have a second abortion years later but that she refused and is now the mother of a son who, she says, rarely sees his father.

The latest accusation came Wednesday when a woman who says she was in a years-long relationship with Walker said at a press conference that he pressured her into having an abortion in 1993.

The woman, referred to as Jane Doe to protect her identity, at a press conference said Walker was not "morally fit to be a U.S. senator.

"He has publicly taken the position that he is about life and against abortion under any circumstance when in fact he pressured me to have an abortion and personally ensured that it occurred by driving me to the clinic and paying for it," said Doe.

Original Article

Arizona AG Candidate Finchem to Newsmax: Dem Hobbs Hiding From Voters

Arizona AG Candidate Finchem to Newsmax: Dem Hobbs Hiding From Voters Mark Finchem Mark Finchem, Republican nominee for Arizona Secretary of State, speaks at a campaign rally attended by former President Donald Trump on Oct. 9, in Mesa, Arizona. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Thursday, 27 October 2022 11:53 AM EDT

Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, the Democrat running against former TV news anchor Kari Lake in Arizona's gubernatorial race, is making a mistake by employing President Joe Biden's "strategy" of campaigning from "the basement" because the public must hear where she stands on the issues, state Rep. Mark Finchem, the state's GOP candidate for Attorney General, said on Newsmax Thursday.

"You can't stay out of the public eye," Finchem told Newsmax's "Wake Up America." "You need to be engaged, and that's one of the things that I think Arizona voters have really taken notice of. She's just not willing to tell Arizona voters where she stands on anything."

Hobbs, he added, "stands for unrestricted abortion, but that's a losing issue. It's not what people are caring about."

Voters care about jobs, the economy, employment, and election integrity, "and many other things that are part of the package that Republicans represent," Finchem said. "Certainly, Kari Lake is carrying that staff."

The three issues Arizonans care about most, he also said, are the border and the increased flow of fentanyl and people; the economy; and election security and integrity.

"People are dying out here, I mean, literally, because they don't have the money for food and fuel," Finchem said. "People are losing their jobs."

The race for Arizona's U.S. Senate seat, meanwhile, is in a dead heat, according to a new poll, but Finchem said he thinks GOP candidate Blake Masters will defeat incumbent Democrat Sen. Mark Kelly.

"He's demonstrated very clearly that he has a command of the subject," said Finchem. "He's caught Mark Kelly in several well, I'll be kind, misstatements. Some people would call them lies."

For example, Kelly is "not a border guy," Finchem said. "He disdains the Border Patrol. But Blake Masters has a very solid command of the subjects that matter to Arizona residents."

Finchem also addressed concerns that debates, such as the one this week in Pennsylvania between Dr. Mehmet Oz and John Fetterman for the U.S. Senate seat, are coming too late and after many people have started casting early ballots.

"I think it's problematic, but many of the candidates have been campaigning now for at least six months, so voters have had an opportunity to review both individuals separately," he said. "Sometimes the debates are helpful. That is one problem, though, with early voting. We are now two weeks into the early voting period in Arizona, and traditionally about 51-52% of the ballots have been returned through the mail by now."

But still, Finchem said there is a significant number of people who want to wait until Election Day to vote, as they want to see all the information they can get first.

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Original Article

USA Today/Suffolk Poll: GOP Gains in Generic Congressional Ballot

USA Today/Suffolk Poll: GOP Gains in Generic Congressional Ballot (Newsmax)

By Jeffrey Rodack | Thursday, 27 October 2022 11:36 AM EDT

As the midterm elections approach, 49% of likely voters now say they would vote for the Republican congressional candidate, compared to 45% who say they would vote for the Democrat, according to a new USA Today/Suffolk University poll.

Republicans had been down 44% to 40% in the generic ballot question in a poll taken in July.

Here are highlights from the poll results released on Thursday:

  • Only 6% are still undecided, compared to 16% who had not made up their minds in the July poll.
  • 37% say inflation is the top issue in the midterms, 18% say abortion, 14% say control of Congress, and 6% said immigration.
  • 66% said the nation is headed in the wrong direction, compared to 24% who say it is on the right track.
  • 53% disapprove of the job Joe Biden is doing as president, while 44% approve.
  • 42% say they believe if Republicans take control of the House, the lawmakers will seriously consider impeaching Biden, compared to 50% who say they don’t believe lawmakers will.
  • 75% say that if Republicans win control of the House, they believe the lawmakers will investigate allegations of wrongdoing by Biden’s son, Hunter. Only 16% say they don’t believe the House will conduct a probe.
  • 45% say they would vote for Biden in a possible 2024 matchup with former President Donald Trump, who was backed by 42%.

The poll, conducted Oct. 19-24, surveyed 1,000 likely voters. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

Original Article

Biden Admin ‘Fuming’ Saudis Reneged on Secret Deal

Biden Admin 'Fuming' Saudis Reneged on Secret Deal (Newsmax)

By Jeffrey Rodack | Thursday, 27 October 2022 08:35 AM EDT

White House officials were left angered that Saudi Arabia backed out of a secret deal to increase oil production through the end of the year, The New York Times is reporting.

President Joe Biden had traveled to Saudi Arabia this summer and left believing the deal was sealed. But in early October Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman led OPEC Plus in its decision to cut production by 2 million barrels per day.

The move came after U.S. lawmakers had been informed about the trip’s benefits and details of what the administration believed was an agreed upon deal. The Times noted the lawmakers are now fuming that the crowned prince duped the administration.

The Times said its information came from interviews with Americana officials and officials from Gulf Arab nations, along with Middle East experts

The newspaper reported that just days before the cuts were announced, American officials said they had received assurances from the crown prince there would be no decreases in oil production. And after learning of the cuts, American officials made an unsuccessful attempt to try to reverse it.

After the cuts, angry Biden officials said the administration was going to reassess America’s relation with the kingdom. The White House also claimed that Saudi Arabia was helping Russia in the war with Ukraine.

.The Saudi Energy Ministry said in a statement that “the kingdom rejects these allegations and stresses that such mischaracterizations made by anonymous sources are entirely false. The decisions of OPEC Plus are reached by the consensus of all members and determined solely by market fundamentals, not politics.”

Adrienne Watson, a National Security Council spokeswoman, said in a statement: “We have a disagreement with Saudi Arabia over the most recent production cut, but our energy policy has always focused on prices, not number of barrels — and that policy is succeeding with crude oil prices down over 30 percent this year alone.”

Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal reported that the crown prince mocked Biden after rejecting the deal

The 37-year-old Saudi prince "mocks President Biden in private, making fun of the 79-year-old’s gaffes and questioning his mental acuity," Saudi government insiders said..

The crown prince told his advisers he had not been impressed with Biden since he was vice president and that he "much preferred" former President Donald Trump.

Original Article

Biden Admin ‘Fuming’ Saudis Reneged on Secret Deal

Biden Admin 'Fuming' Saudis Reneged on Secret Deal (Newsmax)

By Jeffrey Rodack | Thursday, 27 October 2022 09:14 AM EDT

White House officials were left angered that Saudi Arabia backed out of a secret deal to increase oil production through the end of the year, The New York Times is reporting.

President Joe Biden had traveled to Saudi Arabia this summer and left believing the deal was sealed. But in early October, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman led OPEC Plus in its decision to cut production by 2 million barrels per day.

The move came after U.S. lawmakers had been informed about the trip's benefits and details of what the administration believed was an agreed upon deal. The Times noted the lawmakers are now fuming that the crowned prince duped the administration.

The Times said its information came from interviews with American officials and officials from Gulf Arab nations, along with Middle East experts.

The newspaper reported that just days before the cuts were announced, American officials said they had received assurances from the crown prince there would be no decreases in oil production. And after learning of the cuts, American officials made an unsuccessful attempt to try to reverse it.

After the cuts, angry Biden officials said the administration was going to reassess America's relation with the kingdom. The White House also claimed that Saudi Arabia was helping Russia in the war with Ukraine.

The Saudi Energy Ministry said in a statement that "the kingdom rejects these allegations and stresses that such mischaracterizations made by anonymous sources are entirely false. The decisions of OPEC Plus are reached by the consensus of all members and determined solely by market fundamentals, not politics."

Adrienne Watson, a National Security Council spokeswoman, said in a statement: "We have a disagreement with Saudi Arabia over the most recent production cut, but our energy policy has always focused on prices, not number of barrels — and that policy is succeeding with crude oil prices down over 30 percent this year alone."

Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal reported that the crown prince mocked Biden after rejecting the deal.

The 37-year-old Saudi prince "mocks President Biden in private, making fun of the 79-year-old's gaffes and questioning his mental acuity," Saudi government insiders said.

The crown prince told his advisers he had not been impressed with Biden since he was vice president and that he "much preferred" former President Donald Trump.

Original Article

Spotify won’t remove Kanye West’s music despite controversy

Kanye West meets with US President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, October 11, 2018. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo credit should read SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)
Kanye West meets with US President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, October 11, 2018. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty Images)

OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 2:59 PM PT – Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Spotify’s CEO has criticized rapper Ye, known famously as Kanye West, over his recent controversial remarks. However, he says the platform will not remove his music.

Spotify’s CEO Daniel Ek said that Ye’s comments were “just awful,” but Spotify has no plans to take down his music. This comes after Pundits Nationwide called on music streaming services to cancel Ye and pull the rapper’s music from their platforms.

Ek noted that while the comments went against Spotify’s standards, Ye’s music did not, and it would be up to his label on whether or not to remove his music.

So far, Ye has lost multiple sponsorships in light of his comments about Jews, including a deal with Adidas worth more than $1.5 billion.

Original Article Oann

Sen. Grassley Further Ahead Than Iowa Poll Suggests, Backers Say

Sen. Grassley Further Ahead Than Iowa Poll Suggests, Backers Say (Newsmax)

John Gizzi By John Gizzi Wednesday, 26 October 2022 09:12 PM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

Democrats from Des Moines, Iowa, to Washington, D.C., have been making much of the Des Moines Register's "Iowa Poll" showing Democrat Mike Franken closing in on the Hawkeye state's seven-term Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

According to the state's most durable and famous poll, Grassley led first-time candidate and retired U.S. Navy Adm. Franken by slim margin of 46%-43% among likely voters statewide.

Since the poll was released Oct. 15, numerous national media outlets have run major pieces concluding Grassley was locked in the toughest battle of his 42 years in the Senate and could be defeated. The Washington Post headline Tuesday blared: "Has Grassley Finally Met His Match?"

But Grassley supporters dismiss the veracity of the "Iowa Poll."

"It's an outlier," former Polk County (Des Moines) GOP Chairman Kim Schmett told Newsmax. "And two other very respected polls show Chuck headed to a comfortable reelection."

Schmett specifically cited the Emerson College poll, which showed Grassley comfortably leading Franken 49%-38%, and the Cygnal Poll, which gave the senator a healthy 54%-40% edge over Franken.

Much of the press has pointed out the Iowa Poll showed more than two-thirds of the voters considered Grassley's age (89) an important factor in the race. The age factor almost certainly is related to the Iowa Poll showing, for the first time, voters disapproving of the senator's performance in office by 48%-44%.

Grassley supporters counter their man — the oldest and most senior of all 100 senators — is still maintaining the annual regiment of visiting all 99 counties in Iowa that is his signature.

John Gizzi is chief political columnist and White House correspondent for Newsmax. For more of his reports, Go Here Now.

Original Article

Supreme Court’s Kagan Blocks Jan. 6 Panel From Getting Ariz. Republican’s Records

Supreme Court's Kagan Blocks Jan. 6 Panel From Getting Ariz. Republican's Records Supreme Court's Kagan Blocks Jan. 6 Panel From Getting Ariz. Republican's Records Kagan (AP)

Nate Raymond and Andrew Chung Wednesday, 26 October 2022 07:18 PM EDT

Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan on Wednesday temporarily blocked the congressional committee investigating last year's U.S. Capitol attack by then-President Donald Trump's supporters from obtaining Arizona Republican Party Chair Kelli Ward's phone records while the court further assesses the dispute.

Ward, a Trump ally, had asked the Supreme Court to intervene after lower courts declined to bar telephone carrier T-Mobile from complying with a subpoena issued by the Democratic-led House of Representatives committee seeking three months of her call records. Kagan issued an order effectively putting the litigation on hold and preventing enforcement of the subpoena pending a further order by her or the full court.

Kagan is the justice designated to handle emergency appeals from a group of states including Arizona. Kagan's order directs the committee to respond to Ward's request by Friday.

The panel sought the records as part of its investigation into events surrounding the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol by Trump supporters who sought to block Congress from certifying his election loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

The committee last week sent Trump himself a subpoena, which he is expected to contest. Trump, who is considering another run for the presidency in 2024, has accused the panel of waging unfair political attacks on him.

The panel had already been in the process of seeking records concerning Ward, who the panel said participated in multiple aspects of the attempts to interfere with the electoral count.

The records of calls and text exchanges it sought spanned from Nov. 1, 2020, to Jan. 30, 2021, and covered a period when Ward was part of a group of Republicans who falsely presented themselves as Arizona's presidential electors.

Her lawyers argued that providing the panel access to her telephone and text message records would violate Republicans' constitutional rights to free association by giving the committee access to names of party members who spoke with her.

U.S. District Judge Diane Humetewa in Arizona on Sept. 22 said Ward provided no evidence to support her claims that producing the records would chill Republicans' rights or result in harassment of those who interacted with her.

The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Oct. 22 declined to put the subpoena on hold while Ward appealed.

The committee also has subpoenaed Ward herself as one in a group of people who it said had knowledge of or participated in efforts to send false "alternate electors" to Washington for Trump as Congress prepared to certify the election results.

Original Article

Trump to Host Rally for Rubio, Not DeSantis

Trump to Host Rally for Rubio, Not DeSantis (Newsmax)

By Brian Pfail | Wednesday, 26 October 2022 07:00 PM EDT

Former President Trump will hold a third rally for Florida Sen. Marco Rubio just ahead of the midterm elections.

Through his Save America PAC, Trump announced the "Get Out the Vote Rally" in Miami on Sunday, Nov. 6, in support of his Republican colleague running against Democrat Rep. Val Demings.

"President Trump delivered a historic red wave for Florida in the 2018 midterms with his slate of endorsed candidates up and down the ballot and molded the Sunshine State into the MAGA stronghold it is today," read the release. "Thanks to President Trump, Florida is no longer a purple state; it's an America First Red State."

Trump's announcement did not include Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is running for a second term against Democrat Charlie Crist.

The Florida governor is regularly second to Trump as the most popular potential presidential contender for 2024.

DeSantis has not issued any official statement in that regard, but Trump has repeatedly hinted at his third run for the White House.

Both Rubio and DeSantis hold considerable leads against their Democrat opponents. FiveThirtyEight's polling average shows Rubio leading by about 9 points and DeSantis by about 11.

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Original Article

Trump’s Legal Team Accepts Service of Subpoena From Jan. 6 Committee

Trump's Legal Team Accepts Service of Subpoena From Jan. 6 Committee

(Newsmax/"Saturday Report")

By Solange Reyner | Wednesday, 26 October 2022 07:10 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump's legal team has accepted service of a subpoena issued by the Jan. 6 House select committee investigating the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, reports Politico.

The nine-member House panel last week issued a letter to Trump's lawyers demanding his testimony under oath by Nov. 14. They also outlined a request for a series of documents, including personal communications between the former president and members of Congress as well as extremist groups.

An attorney with the Dhillon Law Group, which is representing Trump in his dealings with the House panel, accepted service of the subpoena on Monday, according to Politico.

The committee has been investigating the attack on the Capitol for the past 15 months. In a letter to Trump, it said it had assembled "overwhelming evidence" that the former president "personally orchestrated" an effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election, including by spreading false allegations of widespread voter fraud, "attempting to corrupt" the Justice Department and pressuring state officials, lawmakers and his vice president to try to change the results.

The panel — comprising seven Democrats and two Republicans — approved the subpoena for Trump in a surprise vote last week. Every member voted in support.

The day after, Trump posted a lengthy memo on Truth Social, his social media website, repeating his claims of widespread election fraud and expressing his "anger, disappointment and complaint" that the committee wasn't investigating his claims. He made no mention of the subpoena.

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

Original Article