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What would happen if either Joe Biden or Donald Trump, for whatever reason, is unable to run as the nominee? Politifact looks at a rundown of several scenarios.
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In a landmark ruling with potentially major impact on the 2024 presidential campaign, a U.S. Supreme Court majority ruled that presidents — including former President Donald Trump — have immunity from prosecution when carrying out "official acts."
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President Joe Biden struggled through his first debate of the 2024 campaign against Donald Trump, who was was confident and forceful, even as he let loose a stream of misleading attacks and falsehoods. They disagreed on abortion, inflation, climate change, foreign affairs and immigration.
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President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump shared a debate stage for the first time since 2020 in a feisty confrontation. PolitiFact and ¸Û°ÄÌìϲÊfact-checked 30 statements, on topics including immigration, abortion, inflation, economy, jobs, Trump legal cases, January 6th, health care, foreign policy, Social Security, Medicare and taxes.
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Donald Trump was president when Black poverty and unemployment reached record lows. owever, Trump leaves out that his opponent, President Joe Biden, saw both of those record lows surpassed on his watch.
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The federal judge presiding over the classified documents case against former President Donald Trump is hearing arguments Friday on a long-shot defense effort to get the indictment thrown out on grounds that the prosecutor who brought the charges was illegally appointed.
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To date, the effort has not produced results, as the Republicans who have promised to hold up nominees and legislation are the ones who usually oppose them anyway.
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In Trump’s home state of Florida, where he is registered to vote, the Department of State website says that "a felony conviction in another state makes a person ineligible to vote in Florida only if the conviction would make the person ineligible to vote in the state where the person was convicted."
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COMMENTARY Florida Sen. Marco Rubio disgracefully insults real dictatorship victims by equating Donald Trump's conviction with the real injustices of regimes like Cuba's.
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While many states have been making it easier for those people to vote after serving prison time, Florida and some other states have made it harder.
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PolitiFact provides some answers to the many legal questions coming out of Trump's New York convictions and his bid for the presidency.
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A group of demonstrators gathered at Versailles yesterday, waving Trump flags.