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151
 
 

After performing his rendition of Eminem's "Lose Yourself" at the Iowa State Fair, Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy has been asked by the Real Slim Shady to stand down.

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Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows testified Monday in Fulton County in the first hearing for the Georgia election case in which former President Trump and multiple codefendants face charges related to alleged election interference. In D.C., Trump's trial has been set for March 2024, one day before Super Tuesday. Robert Costa reports on the multiple legal cases the former president faces.

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Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, famous for arguing with Barack Obama on the campaign trail, died of pancreatic cancer Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, who shot to brief fame during the 2008 US presidential election as “Joe the Plumber”, has died aged 49. Cause of death was pancreatic cancer, his wife, Katie Wurzelbacher, told news outlets. Fifteen years ago, Wurzelbacher became famous after arguing with the then Democratic candidate, Barack Obama, on the campaign trail in Toledo, Ohio. Wurzelbacher asked Obama if he would pay more taxes if the Democrat won. Obama, then a US senator from Illinois, conceded that he might. Continue reading...

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Former President Donald Trump falsely claimed Monday that he "never" faced an impeachment inquiry.

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The military will soon change how it purchases the kind of autonomous devices that the Ukrainian military has used against Russia, officials said.

The Pentagon has previously tried to make moves to speed up the acquisition of new technology.

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Prosecutor Monique Worrell says law enforcement agencies in central Florida were ‘all working against me’ An elected Democratic prosecutor whose removal Ron DeSantis boasted about during the first Republican presidential debate said the hard-right Florida governor and his allies ousted her because she was “prosecuting their cops”. Law enforcement agencies in central Florida were “all working against me”, Monique Worrell told the Daily Beast, “because I was prosecuting their cops, the ones who used to do things and get away with them”. Continue reading...

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Testimony by two IRS whistleblowers about President Biden's son, Hunter Biden, was a "game changer," a senior Republican aide said.

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INDIAN LAND, S.C. — EXCLUSIVE — Former ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley says her Republican White House campaign has had a "fantastic response" since last Wednesday's first GOP presidential nomination debate. "I think in the first 72 hours we raised a million dollars. We’ve had thousands of people volunteer. We’ve had a lot of people join the campaign. The phones are still ringing," Haley said on Monday in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital. Haley spoke minutes before holding her first event since last week's debate: a jam-packed town hall in Indian Lake, South Carolina. Haley's campaign said that roughly 1,000 people filled the auditorium, balcony and overflow rooms at a community event space in this northern South Carolina town along the border with North Carolina. HEAD HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING FROM THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL Pointing to the support, Haley said, "We’re grateful. We’re absolutely grateful. But it only keeps us more motivated because we have a country to save." Haley, the only woman among the major candidates running for the Republican nomination, was the first contender on the stage at last week's Fox News-hosted debate in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to come out swinging, targeting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina and former Vice President Mike Pence early in the debate for supporting legislation that raised the national debt. CHECK OUT INITIAL FOX NEWS POWER RANKINGS IN 2024 GOP PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION RACE And Haley, who served as former President Donald Trump's ambassador to the United Nations, was the first to target Trump over his perceived electability liability, arguing the former president was the "most disliked" politician in the country. She also heavily criticized another rival, multimillionaire biotech entrepreneur and first-time candidate Vivek Ramaswamy over foreign policy. She repeated those comments at Wednesday's town hall, charging Ramaswamy's proposals were "completely naive" Asked about the first showdown, Haley said in her interview, "You never know what you’re going to get when you get on a debate stage. You never know what questions you’re going to be asked. You don’t know who’s going to attack or not attack. You don’t know. So it’s all instinct and gut. And it’s about communicating as much as you can, and that’s what we tried to do." "I think we only had eight and a half minutes in two hours. I would have loved to say more, but you take the most of the time that you’re given to really get the substance, solutions and policy out there, and that’s what I tried to do," she emphasized. Haley appeared to enjoy a small bounce in some of the initial public opinion surveys conducted following the debate, but she remains in the single digits, and along with the rest of the large field of contenders remains far behind Trump, who remains the commanding front-runner for the nomination. But Katon Dawson, a former chairman of the South Carolina Republican Party and Haley campaign adviser and surrogate, told Fox News that "what the Fox debate did for us as a campaign was made it all real and start coming together, and I think they [voters] understand the fact that Nikki’s different. … You saw that difference on the debate." Dawson emphasized that the first debate "put gasoline on the fire, and now we’ve got to continue to keep working."

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FIRST ON FOX: The state of Montana filed a legal motion against the Biden administration over its decision to permit a billionaire-backed organization to lease large swaths of public property for non-agriculture uses. In a motion for summary judgment filed with the Department of Interior's Office of Hearings and Appeals late last week, Montana alleged a Bureau of Land Management (BLM) rule issued in 2022 unlawfully prioritizes non-production "conservation herds" over livestock production and the state's rural ranching communities. In July 2022, BLM granted a request to the American Prairie Reserve (APR) to graze bison across leased federal lands. "The BLM’s final decision granting a general use permit to graze bison is a direct attack on rural communities — attacks that have become a hallmark of the Biden Administration," Knudsen told Fox News Digital in a statement. "The BLM has bent over backward to circumvent the law and approve APR’s plan to turn hundreds of thousands of acres of productive ranch land into a nature preserve for the wealthy."  "From shutting out Montana ranchers during the comment period, proposing to copy and paste directly from APR’s website, and ignoring federal law and its own regulations, it’s clear Biden’s BLM intended to rubber stamp this proposal from the start — no matter the impact on and opposition from local communities," he continued. BILLIONAIRE-FUNDED ECO GROUP QUIETLY TAKING FARMLAND OUT OF PRODUCTION IN RURAL AMERICA Knudsen called on the Interior Department's appeals board to step in on the case and force BLM to rescind the rulemaking. BLM and APR have a month to respond to Montana's motion filed Friday. BLM's decision granted APR the ability to graze bison across 63,500 acres of federal lands that the group has leased over the past several years. The group first made the request in 2017 and revised its request in 2019. Overall, APR has completed a total of 37 transactions to create a "habitat base" of 460,800 acres in Montana, of which 124,098 acres it privately owns and 336,702 acres it leases from the state and mainly federal government. The transactions are part of the group's overarching goal of creating a 3.2 million-acre ecosystem connecting private and leased lands to the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge in northern Montana. BIDEN ADMIN ECO RULE CURBING OIL DRILLING, MINING FACES WIDESPREAD OPPOSITION According to the group, the giant conservation project would benefit both wildlife in the region and the public. Instead of asking the federal government to manage the project, APR states that its goals are fueled entirely by private philanthropy and voluntary land exchanges. "We're not asking the federal government to create anything, we're not asking the federal government for any money," Pete Geddes, APR's vice president and chief external relations officer, told Fox News Digital last year. "Instead, we're engaged in private philanthropy and voluntary exchange by buying ranches from people who would like to sell that to us." "It's an area that doesn't have a lot of people in it and has been depopulating for a long, long time," Geddes said. "So, the thinking was, perhaps there's greater potential for less conflict over conservation in this part of the world." In a statement Monday, Geddes said APR was confident in the facts of the case. "The Attorney General, like everyone is entitled to his opinion," Geddes told Fox News Digital. "This case, like all others in which he is engaged, will be judged based on the facts and empirical evidence." The American Prairie Foundation has raised tens of millions of dollars in recent years, according to recent tax filings, thanks in large part to its donors, which include well-known Wall Street and Silicon Valley magnates. Last year, the group reported financial contributions in excess of $63 million, up 53% year-over-year. Hansjorg Wyss, a Swiss financier and mega-donor of liberal causes, deceased German retail mogul Erivan Haub, John Mars, the heir to the Mars candy fortune, and Susan Packard Orr, daughter of the Hewlett-Packard Co. co-founder, have all donated to AP, Bloomberg previously reported. APR, though, said about 3% of its contributions have come from international donors. BIDEN'S LATEST ECO REGS BLASTED BY SMALL BUSINESSES, MANUFACTURERS: 'WILL DO TERRIBLE DAMAGE' However, Knudsen, other state officials including Gov. Greg Gianforte and local ranchers have criticized and opposed APR's plans, arguing such a nature reserve would remove key land from production and negatively impact surrounding privately-owned lands. Opponents of the project have particularly focused their ire on one of the group's chief proposals to release wild bison onto the property, giving visitors "a chance to witness the majestic species." That is the proposal that the Biden administration green-lit in part last year. A grassroots group, the United Property Owners of Montana, has expressed concern that free-roaming bison may infect surrounding livestock with brucellosis, an infectious disease commonly found in bison and elk populations, which could be extremely costly for ranchers if spread to their cattle. And Montana Department of Agriculture Director Christy Clark previously said the plan would remove "large chunks of land from production agriculture," likely decrease agricultural production revenue and harm support industries in the area like machinery sales and ranch laborers. "Despite the public outcry against BLM’s anticipated decision, BLM rubber-stamped APR’s proposal, making a few small tweaks and ultimately awarding APR coveted general grazing permits to graze bison on public lands," Montana argued in its complaint Monday.  "BLM permitted this bison grazing by reclassifying bison as ‘domestic indigenous livestock’ and claiming that this new term of art — that appears nowhere in [federal regulations] — allows BLM to treat cattle and bison interchangeably for the purpose of issuing general grazing permits," the complaint continued. "This defies both law and logic." "Whether APR classifies its bison as conservation animals, non-production animals, or as wildlife, the fact remains that they are not livestock for purposes of the laws that provide for grazing activities." BLM declined to comment.

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Donald Trump's very complicated legal calendar is coming into view. It currently appears that his criminal trials will occur after a large portion of Republican primary voters have decided whether to make him their nominee for the third consecutive time, but before Election Day.

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President Joe Biden on Monday marked the 60th anniversary the March on Washington while issuing a stark warning about the rise of extremism in the United States in the wake of the racist shooting in Jacksonville, Florida, this weekend.

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The Biden administration made its most detailed argument to date on the benefits of organized labor with a potential autoworkers' strike looming as negotiations between the United Auto Workers and auto companies continue and the president works to convince Americans to support his "Bidenomics" vision.

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Former Dekalb County, Georgia, District Attorney J. Tom Morgan reacts to former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows taking the witness stand as he tries to get his case moved from Fulton County to federal court.

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A trial date was set Monday for former President Donald Trump right in the middle of the 2024 presidential primary calendar, while Trump's former chief of staff took the stand in Georgia in what amounted to a mini-trial in the election subversion case there.

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Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, who became known as "Joe the Plumber" after pushing then-Sen. Barack Obama on his economic policies during the 2008 presidential campaign, has died, according to members of his family. He was 49.

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Ray Smith, one of the 19 defendants in the election interference case in Fulton County, Georgia, has waived his arraignment and entered a plea of not guilty, according to a new court filing.

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South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott on Monday rolled out his education and technology plan, arguing that, under President Joe Biden, the role of parents has been minimized in decisions over childhood education and social media habits.

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The federal judge overseeing Peter Navarro's contempt of Congress criminal case on Monday called his defense arguments "pretty weak sauce," injecting last-minute uncertainty into how the former Donald Trump adviser will be able to defend himself during his upcoming trial.

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Hunter Biden was spotted in California over the weekend as he continues to face questions from federal investigators about potential violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).  Hunter and his wife, Melissa Cohen, were photographed outside sushi restaurant Matsuhisa on Saturday following their family vacation with President Biden and other family members in Nevada last week. Photos obtained by Fox News Digital show Hunter adjusting his belt in one photo and surrounded by a group of people who appear to be friends. Hunter was spotted Wednesday walking out the backdoor of a yoga shop during the 9-day stay in Lake at the $18 million home owned by environmental activist, businessman and former Democrat presidential candidate Tom Steyer. HUNTER BIDEN TRAVELED TO AT LEAST 15 COUNTRIES WITH VP DAD: ‘I CAN CATCH A RIDE WITH HIM' Misdemeanor tax charges brought in federal court against Hunter were dismissed by a judge in Delaware this month after a plea deal between parties fell through in July. Gun charges in the same case remain before the court.  After the plea deal fell apart, Hunter pleaded "not guilty" as federal prosecutors confirmed that he was still under federal investigation for a potential FARA violation due to his overseas business dealings.  Attorney General Merrick Garland since named David Weiss special counsel in Hunter's case. Meanwhile, the House Oversight, Judiciary and Ways and Means committees are all probing Hunter's previous business dealings in an effort to determine whether they compromised U.S. national security during Biden's tenure as vice president in the Obama administration. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Earlier Monday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was asked by Fox News' Peter Doocy about who was paying for the $16K per month for Secret Service to stay near Hunter's Malibu mansion rental. "That’s a question for the Secret Service," Jean-Pierre said. She also didn't answer a question about Hunter reportedly selling art to pay for his rent in Malibu, suggesting Doocy contact his legal team. Fox News Digital's Thomas Catenacci and Brandon Gillespie contributed to this report.

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A Republican, he never lost an election in 12 years in Congress and eight more as governor, but his party soured on him when he proposed a state income tax.

Gov. Don Sundquist of Tennessee in 2002. During his first term he reformed the state’s welfare system through a program he called Families First.

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Meadows is seeking to fight the charges in federal court rather than in state court.

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Presidential candidate Nikki Haley is hitting back at GOP contender Vivek Ramaswamy who called her "lying Namrata," referencing her given Indian name, and originally misspelling it on the website.  In an interview with Fox News Digital, Haley said she's "not going to get into the childish name calling," and that he should "know better than that."  On a new page on the newcomer's campaign website called "TRUTH. Over myth," Ramaswamy is attempting to set the record straight on recent attacks leveled by competition for the Oval Office in 2024 related.  One such criticism is Ramaswamy's position on U.S. support to Israel, an accusation leveled by former UN ambassador Haley last week during the first GOP primary debate.  DESANTIS PAC TROLLS RAMASWAMY FOR CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY GAFFE IN GOP DEBATE: VIVEK 'IS MISTAKEN' "WRONG. Keep lying, Namrata Randhawa. The desperation is showing," Ramaswamy's website read earlier today. It has since been updated with the correct spelling for Haley's birth name. "Nimarata Randhawa" appears to be a reference to Haley's birth name of Indian origin, but it leaves out Nikki, her middle name which she goes by. "I’m not going to get into the childish name calling or whatever, making fun of my name that he’s doing," Haley told Fox News Digital. I mean he of all people should know better than that. But I’ve given up on him knowing better than anything at this point. "I think we saw the childish demeaning side of him on stage. I think he’s carrying that out whether it’s on the website or otherwise, but I have no use for it," she continued. Asked for comment, a spokesperson for the Ramaswamy campaign told Fox News Digital, ""How is he making fun of her name? His name is Vivek Ramaswamy."  Matt Whitlock, a former spokesperson for the National Republican Senatorial Committee posted on X that Ramaswamy's fact-check website "feels like parody." "[N]ot sure why using Nikki Haley’s maiden name (spelled wrong) is a rebuttal. But makes clear her debate attacks got under his skin," Whitlock said. He went on to comment that this type of political attack "usually comes from lunatics (on the left or right) accusing her of whitewashing her identity and hiding her heritage. (Who are too stupid to google it and realize Nikki is her actual birth name)."  Another X user pointed out that "what's even crazier" is that Haley was the only candidate during the debate to properly pronounce "Vivek," which he says rhymes with "cake."  Saat Alety of Fed Hall Policy Advisors stated on X that "The references to @NikkiHaley's maiden name or first name as pejoratives are bewildering. She's a married woman -- her last name is Haley."  "Nikki is an extremely common name in Punjabi culture - and it's her middle name. Sad to see this from an Indian-American, @VivekRamaswamy," he stated.  RAMASWAMY, PENCE CLASH AFTER FORMER VP CALLS GOP NEWCOMER A 'ROOKIE': 'THIS ISN'T COMPLICATED' Haley went after Ramaswamy during the debate, saying he has no foreign policy experience and it "shows."  "He wants to hand Ukraine to Russia, he wants to let China eat Taiwan, he wants to go and stop funding Israel. You don’t do that to friends, what you do instead is you have the backs of your friends," Haley said. Ramaswamy responded, "Our relationship with Israel would never be stronger than by the end of my first term, but it’s not a client relationship, it’s a friendship, and you know what friends do? Friends help each other stand on their own two feet." WATCH: HALEY CLASHES WITH RAMASWAMY OVER U.S. AID TO UKRAINE "You know what I love about them? I love their border policies, I love their tough-on-crime policies, I love that they have a national identity and an Iron Dome to protect their homeland, so, yes, I want to learn from the friends that we’re supporting," Ramaswamy added. "No, you want to cut the aid off, and let me tell you, it’s not that Israel needs America, it’s that America needs Israel. They’re on the front line of defense to Iran," Haley retorted, drawing applause from the crowd.  Ramaswamy's website says that, "By the end of Vivek’s first term, the US-Israel relationship will be deeper and stronger than ever because it won’t be a client relationship, it will be a true friendship."  "The centerpiece of Vivek’s Middle East policy in Year 1 will be to lead "Abraham Accords 2.0" which will fully integrate Israel into the Middle East economy – by adding Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, and Indonesia to the pact which was one of President Trump’s crowning foreign policy achievements," the website says.  Fox News Digital's Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

Haley calls Ramaswamy “childish” for odd swipe at her ethnic heritage

Nikki Haley, in an on-camera Fox News Digital interview in Indian Land, South Carolina, was asked about the ‘Keep Lying, Namrata’ comment in a new Vivek Ramaswamy website.

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A March trial could become the center of gravity of the G.O.P. primary, structuring the campaigns of Donald Trump and his rivals.

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The Biden Administration will "encourage" Americans to get the updated COVID-19 vaccine when it rolls out in mid-September, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Monday. "So, we know that as you all know, vaccinations against COVID-19 remains the safest protection for avoiding hospitalization, long-term health outcomes, and death," Jean-Pierre said in the White House briefing room.  "Which is why we are going to be encouraging Americans to stay up to date on their vaccines." Jean-Pierre did not give additional information on whether the administration would require its employees to get the updated shot. The White House told Fox News Digital in an email it will provide additional details in mid-September.  BIDEN PLANS TO ASK CONGRESS FOR FUNDING TO DEVELOP NEW COVID VACCINE, MAY RECOMMEND SHOT FOR ALL The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) expects updated COVID-19 vaccines from pharmaceutical giants Pfizer, Moderna and Novavax by mid-September, but they will need to authorize the vaccines alongside the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The process could take an additional few weeks, pushing the availability of the vaccines to the public to October.  FLU SHOT RECOMMENDATIONS FROM THE CDC: 'VACCINATION SHOULD CONTINUE THROUGHOUT THE SEASON' The updated vaccines are manufactured to target the "XBB variants," which are descendants of the Omicron variant. The XBB variants are currently the most common strains of COVID-19, according to the FDA. "After their authorization or approval, ACIP (Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices) will meet to make a recommendation outlining use of these updated vaccines this fall," CDC spokesperson Kathleen Conley told CBS News in a statement Aug. 9. US HOSPITALS REVIVE MASK MANDATES, SOME SCHOOLS CLOSE AS COVID CASES SURGE On Friday, President Biden announced said he would seek more funding from Congress to support the development of another COVID-19 vaccine.  "I signed off this morning on a proposal we have to present to Congress a request for additional funding for a new vaccine that is necessary, that works," Biden told a reporter. "Tentatively it is recommended that it will likely be recommended everybody get it no matter whether they’ve gotten it before or not." The new vaccines and Biden's comments come as several regions have begun bringing back some COVID 19-era measures, such as mask mandates and physical distancing.  Fox News' Greg Wehner contributed to this report.

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Vulnerable Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin repaid a taxpayer-funded trip she took to New York City in November 2020 after being asked by the press about it. The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reported on Monday that Baldwin – who is running for a third Senate term in the battleground state of Wisconsin – repaid the $630 trip from Madison, Wisconsin, to the Big Apple to visit her partner, private wealth adviser Maria Brisbane. The payment came, however, after the senator was asked about it by the outlet. Baldwin staffers told the Journal-Sentinel that the trip was erroneously marked as official travel. DEM SENATOR TO FUNDRAISE WITH SUPPORTER OF SISTERS OF PERPETUAL INDULGENCE, CRITICAL RACE THEORY Baldwin's office said the senator made the federal reimbursement "out of an abundance of caution," without being asked. "Tammy Baldwin goes above and beyond to ensure her office is in compliance with ethics policies, including as it relates to her travel," Baldwin spokesperson Andrew Mamo told the Journal-Sentinel. A few weeks after the trip, Baldwin advised Wisconsinites to stay home for the holidays amid COVID. National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) spokesperson Tate Mitchell told the outlet it "takes a special kind of arrogance to tell Wisconsin taxpayers not to see their loved ones for the holidays while you bill them for a vacation to see your girlfriend." "Tammy Baldwin should change her campaign slogan to ‘Do as I say, not as I do,’" he added. Baldwin's travel came amid the COVID-19 pandemic when both New York City and Wisconsin were seeing surges of the virus. Next year will prove to be a pivotal one in the Senate, with the slim Democrat majority at stake, as Baldwin runs for re-election on a blue ticket headlined by President Biden. Baldwin fielded some controversy in June for a "very intimate" fundraiser hosted by a left-wing politician who supports the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence and critical race theory (CRT), has a history of anti-police rhetoric, and believes "White supremacy" has a "stranglehold" on society. Baldwin was celebrated at the San Francisco reception among hosts with a long record of left-wing activism, according to a flyer for the fundraiser. The event sought to collect individual contributions between $250 and $3,300 to support the Democratic senator.  Bay Area city council member Carolyn Wysinger, who co-hosted the event, backs several controversial groups. She recently slammed the Los Angeles Dodgers for uninviting the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, an anti-Catholic group of "queer and trans nuns," to their June Pride night. "3-0 is what LA fans get for sitting back as the Dodgers banned the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence from their Pride Night to please religious zealots," Wysinger wrote in a Facebook post. "Black Lesbian Jesus is not pleased, and until y’all do right by the gays a broom will be comin yalls way…." Baldwin's office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Fox News Digital's Aubrie Spady and Joe Schoffstall contributed reporting.

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