Rachel Maddow: "Having a seditious conspiracy conviction in the Oath Keepers case—these convictions tell you in history what this was. And yeah they'll try to contest it, but it's going to make it much harder for them to define this as something normal or laudable."

Thursday, December 01, 2022 |
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TODAY'S TOP MADDOWBLOG POSTS |
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Rachel Maddow: "Having a seditious conspiracy conviction in the Oath Keepers case—these convictions tell you in history what this was. And yeah they'll try to contest it, but it's going to make it much harder for them to define this as something normal or laudable." |
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| Alex Wagner takes a closer look at how anti-abortion activists were able to use donations to the Supreme Court Historical Society and other tricks to gain access to Supreme Court justices in service of their own ideological missions. |
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Alex Wagner takes a closer look at how anti-abortion activists were able to use donations to the Supreme Court Historical Society and other tricks to gain access to Supreme Court justices in service of their own ideological missions. |
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| Melissa Murray, professor at New York University School of Law, talks with Alex Wagner about revelations of how conservative, anti-abortion activists executed a strategy to ingratiate themselves with Supreme Court justices in order to advance their agenda, and how the openness of justices like Sam Alito to this type of influence hurts the integrity of the court. |
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Melissa Murray, professor at New York University School of Law, talks with Alex Wagner about revelations of how conservative, anti-abortion activists executed a strategy to ingratiate themselves with Supreme Court justices in order to advance their agenda, and how the openness of justices like Sam Alito to this type of influence hurts the integrity of the court. |
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| Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg talks with Alex Wagner about the economic concerns driving the Biden administration's eagerness to take whatever solution will pass Congress to resolve the train labor standoff even though the administration is generally supportive of more paid sick leave, a key sticking point in negotiations. |
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Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg talks with Alex Wagner about the economic concerns driving the Biden administration's eagerness to take whatever solution will pass Congress to resolve the train labor standoff even though the administration is generally supportive of more paid sick leave, a key sticking point in negotiations. |
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