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President Donald Trump said Thursday he wishes he could get involved with the Justice Department and direct it toward Hillary Clinton."The saddest thing is that because I'm the President of the United States, I am not supposed to be involved with the Justice Department," Trump said. "I am not supposed to be involved with the FBI."Trump's comments on the radio program "The Larry O'Connor Show" about the Justice Department and FBI came the same week the Justice Department's special counsel investigation handed down indictments to his former campaign hands.The President responded to a suggestion from the host that his listeners want the Justice Department to go after Clinton by saying that he'd like those entities to focus on his 2016 opponent as well."I look at what's happening with the Justice Department. Well, why aren't they going after Hillary Clinton with her emails and with her, the dossier?" Trump said, referring to the law firm Perkins Coie saying it had paid Fusion GPS to compile a dossier of information on Trump and Russia on behalf of Clinton's presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee."I'm very unhappy with it that the Justice Department isn't going," Trump said."I am not supposed to be doing the kind of things that I would love to be doing. And I am very frustrated by it."Trump is under significant scrutiny regarding his interactions with the Justice Department, and it remains unresolved whether he did anything improper by firing former FBI Director James Comey.The President reiterated his unhappiness with his Justice Department Friday morning in a series of tweets, saying "everybody is asking" why the DOJ and FBI isn't investigating Clinton and Democrats."At some point the Justice Department, and the FBI, must do what is right and proper. The American public deserves it!" he tweeted. 1852
President Donald Trump decried the Supreme Court's decision to block his plan to end DACA on Thursday, calling the ruling "horrible & politically charged."Trump added that recent decisions by the Supreme Court are "shotgun blasts into the face of people that are proud to call themselves Republicans or Conservatives."Conservatives currently hold a 5-4 majority on the Supreme Court."Do you get the impression that the Supreme Court doesn't like me?" Trump tweeted minutes later.On Wednesday, the Supreme Court ruled against Trump's plan to end Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or DACA. President Barack Obama established the program in 2012 when lawmakers could not reach a compromise on immigration reform.The program allows more than 500,000 undocumented immigrants to continue working in the United States.In September 2017, Trump announced he planned to end the program after a six-month delay. Several lawsuits were filed against the action, keeping the program running.The decision came days after the Court ruled that employees could not be fired or disciplined for their sexual orientation under the 1964 Civil Rights Act. 1149

Politics can get personal.“I’ve been amazed the last two weeks at how mean people can be," said Pennsylvania voter Kim Vettel. "And it's not just from one political side, it’s everywhere.”Vettel knows just how personal political talk can get."It's been tense for everyone," she said. "It's been heartbreaking, losing friends realizing family members feel different than you but you didn't realize before."Vettel doesn't hide where she stands, there is a Biden sign in the front yard of her home about an hour from Pittsburgh. She lives in a neighborhood where few feel the same way she does about this election.“I’m not embarrassed at all for who I voted for," Vettel said.Vettel also isn’t hiding that the 2020 election is the first time in her life that she has voted. She is 42 years old.“I never been into politics. I didn’t really grow up in a family where it was as big deal," Vettel said. "I can’t remember anyone in my family, in particular, going to vote when I was younger.”The reason for her change? It's personal."My oldest daughter is gay," Vettel said.“My rights as someone who is out as a lesbian," said Vettel's 18-year-old daughter, Haylee Tucker.Tucker displays her first "I voted" sticker on the back of her phone.“They’re doing their research. They’re trying their hardest to do what’s right for everybody. They’re sick of continuing to grow up and have to be adults in it," she said of the many people her age also voting for the first time this election.This isn't the first election where it's been hard to predict what Keystone State voters will do.“The message that came out to residents in Pennsylvania is you’re going to decide the election," Claudia Raymer said.Raymer isn’t a first-time voter, but she’s already thinking to 2024, when her son, Alex, will be able to cast his first ballot.“I don’t vote just based Democrat or Republican. I vote with whatever one seems best," Raymer’s son said.While he can't vote in this election knows its importance."To see him see the value in voting, I feel like I'm doing something right," said Raymer.Alex is also aware not everyone uses their power to vote."It may seem like it doesn’t matter in the long run, but it does," he said. "It is your voice, and you can do whatever you want with it, so it's important it's heard."Voting is an importance not lost on first-time voters like Kim Vettel, who hopes as we move forward, we can look for what is personal to people beyond politics.“My next-door neighbors are Trump supporters, and we love them, they are amazing people, they treat us like family, and just because of who they vote for doesn’t change my thoughts of them," Vettel said. 2664
PORT RICHEY, Fla. — Port Richey, Florida Mayor Dale Massad and his longtime girlfriend Caj Joseph were arrested Aug. 23 on domestic violence charges. Massad was arrested after deputies say he grabbed Joseph and pushed her to the ground.He was charged with a misdemeanor count of domestic battery which required him to spend the night in jail before his first court hearing Friday. In July, police went to Massad's house four dozen times, but he had never been charged with a crime.At the time, he blamed police activity on his girlfriends.“You look in there, see if I made any calls,” he said, pointing to police reports.Joseph, who was arrested Thursday for felony battery of a person over the age of 65, had been charged half a dozen other times for battery, violating protection orders and other crimes allegedly committed at Massad's home.“I'm a felon and I went back there and I don't want to be there,” Joseph told the judge.She also said she was unable to post a 0 bond to get out of jail.“I don't know how to get out of here. I don't have anyone I know. He's not gonna get me out,” Joseph said.Port Richey's city manager instructed the Pasco Sheriff's Office to investigate the case.He could not be reached for comment.Massad and Joseph were ordered not to have any contact with each other after they're released on bond.Massad denied the allegations and said he plans to plead "not guilty."A misdemeanor conviction would not affect his ability to serve in elected office. 1526
President Donald Trump on Tuesday kept up a drumbeat of public support for his CIA director nominee, Gina Haspel, ahead of her confirmation hearing this week."Gina Haspel, my highly respected nominee to lead the CIA, is being praised for the fact that she has been, and alway (sic) will be, TOUGH ON TERROR!" Trump tweeted Tuesday morning. "This is a woman who has been a leader wherever she has gone. The CIA wants her to lead them into America's bright and glorious future!"Haspel, who has been tapped to succeed current Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, is likely to face questions about her past involvement with the CIA's controversial interrogation program during her confirmation hearing on Wednesday. 714
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