Donald Trump, Obama and Epstein
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Obama's debt to Trump in the current president's mind? That the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that presidents have immunity for official acts.
For the last week the White House has been trying to portray Obama and members of his administration as part of a vast “treasonous conspiracy” that tried to thwart Trump.
2don MSN
President Donald Trump is rehashing longstanding grievances over the Russia investigation that shadowed much of his first term.
The U.S. Supreme Court's ruling last year on presidential immunity has broadened the limits of legal protection for presidents.
President Donald Trump stepped into his own trap, and Morning Joe seemed delighted—if somewhat bemused—to have to point it out. On Thursday, MSNBC ran a clip from April 2024 in which the president praised a Supreme Court judge ahead of a ruling that granted sweeping criminal immunity for “official acts,
A spokesperson for Obama denounced Trump's claims, saying "these bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction."
Trump called unabating interest in sex offender Jeffrey Epstein a “witch hunt” and insisted that it’s his predecessor who deserves more scrutiny.
Besides Obama, President Trump on Tuesday rattled off a list of people he accused of acting criminally "at the highest level."
Never one to easily let things go, Donald Trump is still nursing a 14-year grudge, it seems. The president has spent the past week urging prosecutors to haul his predecessor Barack Obama off to jail for what intelligence chief Tulsi Gabbard claims was a “treasonous conspiracy” to subvert her boss’s 2016 election victory.
The Jeffrey Epstein morass surrounding President Donald Trump is deepening amid growing defiance by some Republicans and despite the administration’s most inflammatory attempt yet at distraction.