Politics
Maddow on her ‘profoundly funny’ new documentary on Trump-Ukraine scandal, ‘From Russia with Lev’

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Democrats can’t win without focusing on poor and low-income voters: Bishop William Barber
05:28
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‘Come to Jesus moment’ needed for Democratic Party’s decision-making
07:52
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‘Russia won the Cold War with Trump’: Pro-Russia agenda certain with second term
07:48
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‘Laughing all the way to the bank’: Trump divided America, then these billionaires made $64 billion
11:46
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‘Despair is not an option’: Battle plan for Trump’s mass deportations
08:10
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‘Y’all voted with David Duke’: Joy on 55% of Latino men voting ‘to make deportations happen’
09:19
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‘Trump will consider running in 2028’: Fmr. GOP leader warns he’s ‘not going anywhere’
06:40
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Joy: ‘Make sure on the morning of November 6th, you can say you’re proud of what you did’
11:33
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‘Sick of the B.S.’: Trump suggests Cheney should have ‘guns trained on her face,’ GOP says nothing
11:17
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‘Heartbreaking’: Superstar Janelle Monáe decries women killed by Trump abortion bans
06:53
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‘Trump’s critics will be investigated, prosecuted’: Trump second term plan to ‘ruin lives’ with DOJ
07:36
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‘They want to turn the clock back to the 1850s, not 1950s’: Trump’s final, shocking message to women
11:42
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‘This could cost Trump’: 923,003 Puerto Ricans in swing states might decide election
07:24
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‘Sorry, Donald! Her crowd was bigger’: Trump accuses PA of voter fraud after Harris claims 75K crowd
11:01
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‘Margin of effort race’: Harris to ‘criss-cross’ battleground states to win over undecided voters
05:25
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Maddow: I’m grateful Harris chose The Ellipse, ‘reconsecrating ground’ after Jan. 6
11:54
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‘Trump means it’: Trump’s GOP makes lame excuses for rally attacks on Puerto Ricans, Blacks, women
07:06
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‘Typical Trump’: Racist rally slandering Puerto Ricans could cost him Pennsylvania and more
11:06
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‘Republicans have laid their own trap’: Trump, Cruz vs. voters at war with abortion bans
03:22
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Joy: ‘If I missed something great the Trumps have contributed to America, please fill me in’
10:47
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UP NEXT

Democrats can’t win without focusing on poor and low-income voters: Bishop William Barber
05:28
-

‘Come to Jesus moment’ needed for Democratic Party’s decision-making
07:52
-

‘Russia won the Cold War with Trump’: Pro-Russia agenda certain with second term
07:48
-

‘Laughing all the way to the bank’: Trump divided America, then these billionaires made $64 billion
11:46
-

‘Despair is not an option’: Battle plan for Trump’s mass deportations
08:10
-

‘Y’all voted with David Duke’: Joy on 55% of Latino men voting ‘to make deportations happen’
09:19
Politics
NYC officials plan to reraise pride flag at Manhattan’s Stonewall monument after Trump administration removed it
New York City officials plan to reraise a pride flag at the federal monument at Stonewall in Manhattan, setting up a potential fight with the White House at the birthplace of the modern gay rights movement nearly 60 years ago.
Federal officials quietly took the flag down after the Trump administration in January issued guidance drastically limiting the types of flags that could be displayed at sites managed by the National Park Service. But Manhattan Borough President Brad Hoylman-Sigal said in an interview on Tuesday that he and other New York City-area politicians would reraise the flag at the federal monument on Thursday.
“I think it’s important that we speak out and stand up for the community, frankly, just as our forebearers, who exhibited much more courage back in 1969,” he said. “This is not a moment for our community to stand by idly as attempts to undermine our history are put forward by Trump and the federal administration.”
The Stonewall Inn was the site of famous protests in 1969, which were sparked after police raided the New York City gay bar and arrested its patrons. The subsequent uprisings led to greater visibility for gay and lesbian people across the country.
The Inn remains in private hands, but a park across the street is national parkland. Hoylman-Sigal said New York City officials intended to raise the flag on federal land.
The Department of Interior — NPS’ parent agency — confirmed the flag was removed in a statement.
“Under government-wide guidance, including General Services Administration policy and Department of the Interior direction, only the U.S. flag and other congressionally or departmentally authorized flags are flown on NPS-managed flagpoles, with limited exceptions,” the Department of the Interior said in a statement. “Any changes to flag displays are made to ensure consistency with that guidance.”
An Interior spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the New York City officials’ plans. The National Park Service did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Trump administration has made several changes to national parks as the president pushes what he describes as an “anti-DEI” agenda. The agency took down exhibits on slavery at the Philadelphia site of the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall in January. And last August, NPS announced plans to reinstate a statue of Confederate general Albert Pike in Washington.
Hoylman-Sigal called the latest move “another outrage by the Trump administration directed at the LGBTQ community, whether it’s transgender youth or immigrants or queer people in general.”
Pride flags have continued to fly at the Stonewall Inn and visitor’s center, which are privately owned, according to Brandon Wolf, the national press secretary at the LGBTQ+ rights group Human Rights Campaign.
“We will keep showing up at Stonewall, for each other, and being out and proud,” he said in a statement. “There’s nothing the White House can do about that.”
Politics
Epstein made regular payments to Ohio State head of gynecology, records show
Convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein paid Ohio State University’s head of gynecology quarterly payments of thousands of dollars, Department of Justice files show…
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Politics
Optimism in US at record low: Gallup
Optimism among U.S. adults has sunk to a record low, according to a new Gallup survey. The poll, released Tuesday, found that less than six in 10 respondents anticipate high-quality lives in five years as of 2025. That marks the lowest rating on the subject since Gallup began surveying Americans on it in 2009 and…
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