Former President Trump's attack this week against Joe O'Dea, the GOP's Senate nominee in Colorado, is angering Republicans while leaving them wondering if he even cares about the party winning back the majority in the upper chamber. O'Dea, a pro-abortion rights moderate whom Democrats spent $4 million against in the primary, was already in an uphill fight against Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.). Trump called O'Dea "stupid" and a "RINO," or Republican in Name Only, on social media after O'Dea expressed rather mild disapproval of the former president, saying he thought there would be better GOP candidates for 2024. Now Republicans worry any chance he has of pulling off an upset are being extinguished by Trump, prompting frustration and exasperation with the ex-president. "It certainly is not [helpful]," Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), a Trump ally, told The Hill. "I would hate to see O'Dea lose to Sen. Bennet by a few votes just because Donald Trump urged Republicans not to vote and we came up short of the majority by one senator." "The nation has to be more important than individual personal offenses," Cramer added. Read more here. |
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Welcome to The Hill's Evening Report, catching you up on news from the afternoon and looking at the big stories likely to impact tomorrow. |
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🗣️ What to know about Trump's upcoming deposition in lawsuit |
Former President Trump is scheduled to be deposed in a defamation case brought by a woman who has accused the former president of raping her in the 1990s, after a federal judge rejected his latest effort to delay last week. |
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🏛️ Biden tries to rally Dems on abortion, calls to codify Roe v. Wade
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President Biden is seeking to refocus the upcoming midterm elections on the debate over abortion rights, pledging to push for a bill to codify abortion access if Democrats add to their majorities in Congress. |
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📉 Fitch Ratings predicts mild recession by spring
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Financial services company Fitch Ratings has predicted in a new report the U.S. will enter a mild recession akin to the 1990 recession starting in the spring of next year. |
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⛽ US to announce release of 15M barrels of oil from strategic reserve |
The U.S. will release 15 million barrels of oil from its strategic reserve, Biden administration officials plan to announce Wednesday. It's the final tranche of a disbursement of 180 million announced in March and comes as energy prices threaten to rise again less than a month before Election Day. |
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🍑 Georgia smashes record for early voting
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Georgia voters turned out for the first day of early voting in record numbers, with ballots cast already exceeding one-day early voting results in the 2018 midterms. |
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🎓 Cato Institute sues Education Department over student loan relief
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The Cato Institute, a Libertarian think tank, has sued the Department of Education over President Biden's plan to cancel some student loan debt. |
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| 🌈 HRC launches ad campaign in battlegrounds
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The Human Rights Campaign, the nation's largest LGBTQ advocacy organization, has launched six-figure ad buys in four battleground states to mobilize voters ahead of next month's midterm elections. |
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🗳️ Florida paper posts video of arrests in DeSantis voter fraud effort |
Newly released police footage obtained by the Tampa Bay Times shows confusion amid Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis's (R) efforts to crack down on voter fraud in August.
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💜 Swalwell offers relationship advice for politically divided couples
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Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) says it's possible to find love with someone on the opposite side of the aisle — and that couples with opposing political views "absolutely can work." |
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💰 Abbott to miss Trump rally for fundraiser in Florida
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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) will miss former President Trump's rally in his state this weekend for a fundraiser in Florida. |
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☢️ Four non-nuclear ways Putin could escalate the Ukraine war
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Military experts say there are a number of non-nuclear ways that Russian President Vladimir Putin could escalate the war in Ukraine in an attempt to curb battlefield losses. |
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📝 Primary Steele dossier source acquitted in loss for special counsel
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Igor Danchenko, the primary source behind the Steele dossier, was acquitted of lying to the FBI in a case brought by special counsel John Durham.
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The real threat to democracy: Declining trust in the courts
| "It is the three liberals, or four when there was that many, on the Court who vote in lockstep," writes Merrill Matthews of the Institute for Policy Innovation. |
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