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Nikki Haley Passes DeSantis in Latest New Hampshire Poll

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The Republican primary field is shifting…

A new poll of likely Republican primary voters in New Hampshire showed former South Carolina governor Nikki Haleyโ€” not Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis โ€” running second in the first primary state.

Haley beat DeSantis 19 percent to 10 percent in a Suffolk University/Boston Globe/USA TODAY survey released on Wednesday morning.

But they both remain far behind the frontrunner, Donald Trump. The former president leads his Republican rivals with 49 percent support in the poll of 500 likely GOP primary voters that was conducted after the second debate and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points.

But Trump remains immovable atop the field. And no other candidate cracked double digits in the Suffolk/Globe/USA TODAY survey. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie notched 6 percent support, while entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott got roughly 4 percent apiece. Former Vice President Mike Pence and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum trailed even further behind, with just 1 percent each.

The poll comes days before GOP candidates will descend on New Hampshire next week, starting with the former president on Monday and most of the rest of the field at a weekend cattle call hosted by the state GOP.

Report: SCOTUS Rejects Kari Lake’s Voting Machine Suit

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Duncan Lock, Dflock, CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear Republicans Kari Lake and Mark Finchem’s lawsuit over the use of voting machines in Arizona elections.

The Hill reports Lake and Finchem asked the Supreme Court to review a federal appellate judgeโ€™s decision to dismiss their case last October. The suit sought to block electronic voting machines from being used in the state, questioning their accuracy and reliability.  

Lawyers for Lake, who is running for a Senate seat in Arizona this cycle, and Finchem, who is seeking a state Senate seat, argued in a court filing to the Supreme Court that they had sufficiently argued that โ€œ[a]ll Arizona-certified optical scanners and ballot marking devices, as well as the software on which they rely, have been wrongly certified for useโ€; Arizonaโ€™s voting machines had been โ€œhackedโ€ and โ€œmanipulatedโ€; and that there were apparent discrepancies in the Maricopa Countyโ€™s vote count after the 2020 election. 

The lawsuit was filed ahead of the November 2022 midterms while Lake was running for governor.

The Supreme Courtโ€™s decision to decline to revisit the federal courtโ€™s decision puts a cap on Lakeโ€™s and Finchemโ€™s lawsuit.

โ€œWe are obviously disappointed that the U.S. Supreme Court decided not to review the decisions of the Arizona district court and the Ninth Circuit, and order that our challenge to the 2022 election procedures be heard on the merits,โ€ said Kurt Olsen, one of the attorneys that sought to get the Supreme Court to consider the case, in a statement, who argued new information came to light after their case was dismissed by the  circuit court. 

โ€œAlthough the Supreme Court grants review in less than 1 percent of cases presented on petition, we believe we presented a case.โ€

โ€œThe Kari Lake and Mark Finchem case was dismissed based on a purported lack of standing to assert an injury,โ€ Olsen wrote. โ€œTherefore, the courts, even now, have not ruled on the merits of our case. We will continue to raise these issues especially in light of the upcoming 2024 election.โ€

Trump Openly Backs Candidate In Tennessee Special Election

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Former President Trump is urging Tennessee voters to support Republican Matt Van Epps in Tuesdayโ€™s special election to fill the stateโ€™s vacant 7th Congressional District seat, claimingโ€”without evidenceโ€”that Democratic nominee Aftyn Behn โ€œopenly disdains Country music.โ€

โ€œI am asking all America First Patriots in Tennesseeโ€™s 7th Congressional District, who havenโ€™t voted yet, to please GET OUT AND VOTE on Election Day, Tuesday, December 2nd, for a phenomenal Candidate, Matt Van Epps,โ€ Trump wrote Sunday on Truth Social.

Trump further escalated his criticism of Behn in the post, alleging: โ€œMatt is fighting against a woman who hates Christianity, will take away your guns, wants Open Borders, Transgender for everybody, men in womenโ€™s sports, and openly disdains Country music. She said all of these things precisely, and without question โ€” ITโ€™S ON TAPE!โ€

Van Epps, previously the commissioner of the Tennessee Department of General Services, is running against Behn, a state representative, to succeed former Rep. Mark Green (R). Green resigned earlier this year to pursue a private-sector opportunity, triggering the special election.

Background on the Controversy

Republicans have seized on remarks Behn made in a 2020 episode of the podcast Grits, where she said:
โ€œIโ€™ve been heavily involved in the Nashville mayoral race because I hate this city, I hate the bachelorettes, I hate the pedal taverns, I hate country music. I hate all the things that make Nashville apparently an โ€˜it cityโ€™ to the rest of the country.โ€

Behn has since clarified that the comments were made in frustration and do not reflect her views as an elected official. In a video released last month, she explained:

โ€œNow, I always want Nashville to be better, right? I want Nashville to be a place where working people can thrive, right? But sure, I get mad at the bachelorette [parties] sometimes, I get mad at the pedal taverns, right? Talking to someone who has cried no less than 10 times in the Country Music Hall of Fame.โ€

She added in a corresponding post: โ€œNO, I DO NOT HATE THE CITY I REPRESENT,โ€ punctuating the statement with three laughing emojis.

Behn Campaign Response

Behnโ€™s campaign manager, Kate Briefs, responded sharply to Trumpโ€™s attack, saying the former president is lying โ€œbecause he is panicking about his tanking approval numbers as Tennessee voters hold him accountable for his failed economic policies that are raising their costs, while lowering taxes for their billionaire donors.โ€

Context: Why This Special Election Has Drawn Attention

Tennesseeโ€™s 7th District is traditionally a reliably Republican seat, and Van Epps enters the race with a structural advantage. Still, Democrats see the contest as an opportunity to demonstrate voter enthusiasm heading into the 2026 midtermsโ€”particularly if they can outperform expectations in a deep-red district.

Special elections in off-years often serve as indicators of base energy for both parties. National Democrats have been encouraged by recent overperformances in similar contests across the country and hope Behn can replicate that trend.

Polling Suggests a Competitive Race

At least one surveyโ€”conducted last week by Emerson College Polling and The Hillโ€”suggests the race may be closer than expected. The poll showed Behn and Van Epps running neck and neck, signaling that Democratic enthusiasm and Trumpโ€™s polarizing involvement may be tightening the contest.

Widely-Rumored 2028 Democrat Presidential Contender Takes His Name Out of Consideration

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P0120021CK-1111: President Joe Biden delivers his inaugural address Wednesday, Jan. 20, 2021, during the 59th Presidential Inauguration at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

One down…

Over the weekend, a popular Democrat governor widely believed to be a top 2028 presidential contender officially took his name out of the running.

Maryland Gov.ย Wes Mooreย (D) on Sunday said he is โ€œnot running for presidentโ€ in โ€™28 โ€” knocking out one of theย top contendersย to lead the Democratic ticket, three years before the election.

Moore, while appearing on NBCโ€™sย Meet the Press,ย was asked by hostย Kristen Welkerย if he plans on serving a full term if he wins reelection as governor next year. He told Welker he does plan on serving the full four-year term โ€” leading her to clarify that means he is removing himself from the โ€™28 field.

โ€œDo you rule out a run for president, governor?โ€ Welker asked him.

โ€œYeah, Iโ€™m not running for president,โ€ Moore responded.

She responded: โ€œYou rule it out?โ€

Moore then told her โ€œYes, Iโ€™m not running for president.โ€

At that point, Welker asked him once again to clarify his intentions, asking if he โ€œcompletelyโ€ ruled it out.

Here is what Moore said:

โ€œIโ€™m so excited about what weโ€™re doing. That weโ€™ve gone from 43rd in the country in unemployment to now one of the lowest unemployment rates. Weโ€™ve had amongst the fastest drops in violent crime anywhere in the United States of America. Our population is growing. Maryland is moving, and so Iโ€™m really excited about going back in front of the people of my state and asking for another term.โ€

Watch:

Last month, Kalshi betting market put Moore at 6% odds to be the partyโ€™s nominee โ€” which came in fourth behind California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) at 20%, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) at 15%, and former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg (D) at 10%. The president site Polymarket also had Moore as a top five contender.

In 2024, the Maryland Governor faced controversy after falsely claiming to be a Bronze Star recipient on a 2006 White House fellowship application.ย 

Moore, who was 27 years old when he applied for the White House position, blamed his Army superiors for the inclusion of the falsehood on the application and said he never corrected the mistake because he was eager to โ€œbegin the next phaseโ€ of his life, in a statement released after theย New York Timesย reported on the embellishment.ย 

โ€œThese are the facts,โ€ the Maryland governor wrote in his lengthy statement. โ€œWhile serving overseas with the Army, I was encouraged to fill out an application for the White House Fellowship by my deputy brigade commander. In fact, he helped me edit it before I sent it in. At the time, he had recommended me for the Bronze Star. He told me to include the Bronze Star award on my application after confirming with two other senior-level officers that they had also signed off on the commendation.โ€ 

Moore noted that his deputy brigade commander โ€œfelt comfortable with instructing me to include the awardโ€ on the application because he was under the impression that the medal for heroic or meritorious service had already been โ€œapproved by his senior leadership.โ€ 

โ€œIn the military, there is an understanding that if a senior officer tells you that an action is approved, you can trust that as a fact. That is why it was part of the application, plain and simple,โ€ the governor explained. 

โ€œTowards the end of my deployment, I was disappointed to learn that I hadnโ€™t received the Bronze Star. But I was ready to begin the next phase of my life,โ€ Moore continued. 

Moore deployed to Afghanistan as a lieutenant with the 82nd Airborne Division in 2005, according to hisย official governorโ€™s biography.ย 

Moore was ultimately awarded the Bronze Star in December 2024 for his deployment to Afghanistan.

Kamalaโ€™s Trump-Epstein ‘Bombshell’ Falls Apart – Fact-Check Reveals Glaring Problem

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The White House, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Thursdayโ€™s unveiling of a decades-old sexualย assaultย allegation againstย Donald Trump, purported involvingย Jeffrey Epsteinย and former model Stacey Williams, has sparked more questions than answers. The allegation surfaced during aย paidย Zoom call hosted by the Harris campaign, raising immediate doubts about the timing and intent behind the claim. Even more curious, the story found its way into print not in the United States but in the left-leaning British newspaper,ย The Guardian, after multiple Americanย mediaย outlets reportedly passed on the story.

Even some users who arenโ€™t exactly Trump supporters found the release disappointing. On X, Election Wizard voiced frustration with the Harris campaignโ€™s so-called โ€œOctober surprise.โ€ โ€œI feel very let down by the Harris people. I was promised a โ€˜bombshell Trump storyโ€™ that would upend the race,โ€ Election Wizard tweeted. โ€œInstead, I got tabloid pieceโ€ published in a partisan British newspaper.

A Timeline That Doesnโ€™t Add Up

Adding to the skepticism is the timeline of the alleged events, which is, at best, murky. The accusation, now over 30 years old, reportedly involves an encounter between Williams, Epstein and Trump. In a video interview, Williams recounts a walk with Epstein โ€œfrom his brownstone on the Upper East Side down Fifth Avenueโ€ in โ€œlate winter of 1993,โ€ claiming they visited Trump on a whim.

However, this is where the details begin to unravel. According to ZeroHedge, Epstein only moved into the Wexler mansion on 9 East 71st Street in 1996โ€”three years after this supposed impromptu visit with Trump was said to have taken place. So, how could such a meeting have happened in a location Epstein hadnโ€™t even acquired yet?

As reported by American Liberty News on Wednesday, political journalist Mark Halperin warned about โ€œactorsโ€ attempting to influence the 2024 presidential race. Halperin mentioned that he was approached with a story supposedly capable of โ€œending Trumpโ€™s campaign,โ€ but he did not find it credible and chose not to pursue it:

โ€œThe point I was making is actors who want a certain outcome are on social media and in pitches to reporters, and in the case of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldbergโ€ฆ are trying to affect the end of the race because theyโ€™re so desperate to try to pull a Comey,โ€ Halperin stated, referencing the 2016 electionโ€™s late-stage developments. He reiterated, โ€œIโ€™m not pursuing the story. I donโ€™t think itโ€™s trueโ€ฆ All Iโ€™m saying is there are people out there pitching stuff.โ€ (RELATED: Slain Soldierโ€™s Family Dismisses The Atlanticโ€™s Trump โ€˜Hit Pieceโ€™)

This clarification comes amid signs of stronger-than-expected early voting turnout for Republicans, though prominent conservatives are warning supporters not to become complacent.

This article originally appeared on American Liberty News. It is republished with permission.

READ NEXT: Democratic Party Operative Allegedly Caught Tampering With Ballot Drop Box In Montana

Man Who Falsely Claimed To shoot Charlie Kirk Sentenced To Prison

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Image via Pixabay

In a strikingly bizarre footnote to the tragic assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, a Utah man who falsely claimed responsibility for the fatal shooting has now been sentenced and faces up to 15 years in prison.

Seventy-one-year-old George Hodgson Zinn โ€” who dramatically approached law enforcement at Utah Valley University, yelling โ€œI shot him โ€” now shoot meโ€ moments after Kirk was gunned down โ€” has now pleaded no contest to obstruction of justice and guilty to two counts of sexual exploitation of a minor, according to court records.

While Zinnโ€™s initial false confession drew headlines and confusion during the chaotic aftermath of the shooting โ€” leading some to believe he was the shooter โ€” investigators quickly ruled him out as a suspect in Kirkโ€™s assassination.

During questioning at a hospital after the incident, Zinn shocked authorities by admitting he had child sexual abuse material on his phone. A warrant later uncovered more than 20 images depicting abused minors, and prosecutors charged him accordingly.

In Salt Lake County district court, Zinn was sentenced to zero to five years for obstruction and one to 15 years for each exploitation count, with the judge ordering the terms to run concurrently. The exact amount of time he will serve will be decided by the Utah parole board.


Remembering Charlie Kirk: A Conservative Voice Silenced

The backdrop to this strange prosecution is one of the most shocking episodes of political violence in recent U.S. history. On Sept. 10, 2025, Charlie Kirk โ€” founder and executive director of the conservative youth advocacy group Turning Point USA and a leading voice in the MAGA movement โ€” was assassinated by a sniper while speaking at an outdoor event on the Utah Valley University campus.

Kirk, just 31 years old, had become one of the most recognizable young conservative figures in America. He built Turning Point USA from a student organization into a powerful grassroots force shaping Republican campaigns, energizing young voters, and challenging campus liberal orthodoxy across the country.

Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

His death prompted an outpouring of grief and outrage from Republican leaders and conservative grassroots activists, who saw the attack as not just a crime but part of a broader pattern of hostility toward conservatives. Thousands attended memorial events, and his legacy has become a rallying point in debates over political violence and free speech on college campuses and beyond.

The suspect in the shooting โ€” 22-year-old Tyler James Robinson โ€” was later arrested and charged with aggravated murder. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty, underscoring the gravity of the crime and the national attention still focused on the case.


What This Means Going Forward

Zinnโ€™s sentencing closes one strange chapter in the unfolding story of the Kirk assassination, but it also highlights the turmoil that followed one of the most prominent conservative leaders of his generation. A man who tried โ€” for reasons still unclear โ€” to throw law enforcement off the trail of the real shooter now faces prison time for his own criminal behavior.

Trump Denies Asking GOP Governor for Endorsement

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    Photo via Gage Skidmore Flickr

    Donald Trump is setting the record straight.

    The 2024 presidential candidate is refusing a New York Times report which claimed the former president asked Sarah Huckabee Sanders to endorse his most recent White House campaign. Sanders, who previously served as Trump’s White House Press Secretary was elected Governor of Arkansas in November.

    The New York Timesย reportedย on March 4 that Trump is having difficulty garnering public support from former allies, noting that Trump was โ€œdisappointedโ€ after Huckabee Sanders, his former White House press secretary, reportedly said she would not yet publicly support him.

    Trump refuted the claims in a post on Truth Social, slamming the report as fake.

    โ€œAs per a rather unimportant Fake News report in the NYT, I never asked Sarah Huckabee Sanders for an endorsement,โ€ Trump wrote.

    โ€œI give endorsements, I donโ€™t generally ask for them. With that being said, nobody has done more for her than I have, with the possible exception of her great father, Mike!โ€ he added.

    Sanders has notably stayed out of the 2024 race so far.

    โ€œMy focus isnโ€™t on 2024,โ€ Sanders told Shannon Bream on โ€œFox News Sundayโ€ in January.

    Trump won with 62 percent, while Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), likely his closest rival, came in at 20 percent. Businessman Perry Johnson, who announced his candidacy for the White House this week, earned 5 percent.

    Trump won last yearโ€™s straw poll at CPAC in Orlando, Fla., with 59 percent support. DeSantis scored 28 percent in that straw poll.

    Biden DHS Still Colluding with Big Tech to Censor Dissent

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    Joe Biden via Gage Skidmore Flickr

    ANALYSIS โ€“ Even as Biden’s Department of Homeland Security (DHS) publicly shuttered its stillborn ‘Disinformation Governance Board’ (aka Ministry of Truth) after a huge outcry, new evidence shows that Team Biden is still trying to use DHS to collude with Big Tech to censor Americans on social media.

    The latest information uncovered through an investigation by The Intercept points to a Facebook-designed portal that government officials could use to flag content they deem objectionable and request that the platform remove it. 

    According to The Intercept:

    There is also a formalized process for government officials to directly flag content on Facebook or Instagram and request that it be throttled or suppressed through a special Facebook portal that requires a government or law enforcement email to use. At the time of writing, the โ€œcontent request systemโ€ at facebook.com/xtakedowns/login is still live. DHS and Meta, the parent company of Facebook, did not respond to a request for comment. The FBI declined to comment.

    That the federal government believes it can directly help control what views and news can be disseminated online is beyond reprehensible.

    As The Intercept notes:

    How disinformation is defined by the government has not been clearly articulated, and the inherently subjective nature of what constitutes disinformation provides a broad opening for DHS officials to make politically motivated determinations about what constitutes dangerous speech.

    In other words, governments don’t decide what is valid information and what isn’t.

    Instead, that is what politics, a free media and the marketplace of ideas are for.

    But Big Brother, especially under Democrats, is relentless in its appetite for control. (RELATED: Congressional Leaders Expose Scheme to Pump Liberal Misinformation Network Into Classrooms)

    The Intercept continues to describe this Orwellian effort:

    Key Takeaways:

    * The work is primarily done by CISA, a DHS sub-agency tasked with protecting critical national infrastructure.

    * DHS, the FBI, and several media entities are having biweekly meetings as recently as August.

    * DHS considered countering disinformation relating to content that undermines trust in financial systems and courts.

    * The FBI agent who primed social media platforms to take down the Hunter Biden laptop story continued to have a role in DHS policy discussions.

    And all this has been corroborated by official documentation and other news reporting.

    Earlier, NewsBusters reported that:

    DHS continued its counter-โ€œdisinformationโ€ work in a more cloaked fashion, and that the government specifically intended to target certain content areas including COVID-19, election security and โ€œdomestic violent extremism.โ€

    Considering how much ‘accepted’ information about COVID was later proven false or questionable and how the FBI and DOJ have been falsely hyping the otherwise minor ‘domestic violent extremism’ threat, this effort is highly concerning.

    Meanwhile, a DHS Office of Inspector General report recommended that DHS โ€œdevelop a unified strategy to counter disinformation campaigns that appear in social media.โ€

    All this portends an extremely dangerous trend that must be stopped in its tracks. 

    It is critical that a GOP-controlled Congress investigate and help dismantle all these insidious DHS ‘disinformation’ efforts as soon as possible.

    Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.

    Amanda Head: ‘The Flash’ Actor Faces Disturbing Allegations

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      Photo via Gage Skidmore Flickr

      Ezra Miller, an actor known for roles in popular movies like “The Flash” and “The Perks of Being a Wallflower” is facing disturbing allegations of grooming minors and then using his own sexual identity as a defense

      Watch Amanda break it down here.

      ICE Tracking App Maker Sues Over Trump Administration Pressure

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      President Donald J. Trump participates in a roundtable discussion on immigration and border security at the U.S. Border Patrol Calexico Station Friday, April 5, 2019, in Calexico, Calif. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead)

      The creator of ICEBlockโ€”an iPhone app designed to alert users to the presence of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officersโ€”has filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, claiming federal officials violated his free-speech rights by urging Apple to pull the app from its store.

      Joshua Aaron, the developer behind the app, contends in his complaint that building, distributing, and promoting ICEBlock is โ€œFirst Amendment-protected speech.โ€ He alleges that Attorney General Pam Bondi and other administration officials engaged in a coordinated โ€œpressure campaignโ€ to force Apple to remove the app, calling the effort an unlawful act of censorship.

      โ€œWeโ€™re basically asking the court to set a precedent and affirm that ICEBlock is, in fact, First Amendment-protected speech and that I did nothing wrong by creating it,โ€ Aaron told The Associated Press on Monday. โ€œAnd to make sure that they canโ€™t do this same thing again in the future.โ€

      The lawsuit also asks a federal judge to bar any criminal prosecution of Aaron, citing what he describes as โ€œunlawful threatsโ€ from Bondi, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, ICE Acting Director Todd M. Lyons, and White House Border Czar Tom Homanโ€”all of whom, according to Aaron, indicated they would investigate him for creating the app.

      He told the AP that one of his motives for suing is โ€œto basically have them stop threatening myself and my family.โ€

      Why the App Was Removed

      Apple removed ICEBlock and similar apps in October after Bondi publicly warned that the tools endangered federal immigration officers by allowing the publicโ€”including individuals seeking to evade law enforcementโ€”to monitor ICE activity in real time.

      Bondi defended the removal in a Fox News interview, arguing that Aaronโ€™s app could compromise officer safety. โ€œHeโ€™s giving a message to criminals where our federal officers are. And he cannot do that,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd we are looking at it, we are looking at him, and he better watch out, because thatโ€™s not protected speech.โ€

      Broader Context: Trumpโ€™s Immigration-Enforcement Strategy

      The dispute comes amid the Trump administrationโ€™s continued efforts to restore aggressive federal enforcement of immigration lawโ€”an agenda that has been a central pillar of the presidentโ€™s policy platform. ICE has been directed to prioritize arrests of criminal offenders, expand cooperation with local law-enforcement agencies, and counter efforts by progressive โ€œsanctuaryโ€ jurisdictions to obstruct federal operations.

      Officials like Noem, Homan, and Bondi have repeatedly emphasized the dangers facing ICE officers on the ground. From hostile sanctuary-city policies to the rapid spread of mobile apps that help individuals avoid lawful apprehension, the administration argues that these challenges make it more difficult to enforce immigration laws and protect communities.