Skip Navigation
Breaking News
Breaking News
from Washington and beyond

J.D. Vance Caught Lying About Egg Prices in Painfully Bad Video

If you’re going to lie about something on video, at least check what’s in the background first.

J.D. Vance smiles and gives two thumbs up
Joe Raedle/Getty Images

J.D. Vance attempted to point out high prices in a recent campaign stunt at a grocery store, only to be caught with egg on his face.

On Saturday, the Trump War Room account on X posted a video of Vance visiting a grocery story, in which the vice presidential nominee complains that prior to Kamala Harris taking office, eggs cost less than $1.50 a dozen, but they now cost around $4 thanks to “the Inflation Explosion Act.”

But, easily visible in the video are the prices of the eggs behind him, which clearly cost between $2 and $3, which commentators on X quickly pointed out.

Twitter screenshot sam @sam_d_1995 Zoom & enhance… those eggs are $2.99 sir (Vance standing in front of the eggs section)
Twitter screenshot Alex Cole @acnewsitics Even in their own damn photo, it shows JD Vance is lying about the price of eggs. (zoomed in photo of $2.99 price tag behind Vance, who is holding a tray of eggs)

The Republican vice presidential candidate is also holding a package that clearly looks like two dozen eggs, not one dozen.

Twitter screenshot ❤️‍🔥 A To The Z ❤️‍🔥 @A_tothe_Z_Amber: He also can't count either since he's holding what looks to be a package of more than two dozen eggs. The lies just keep coming. 3:23 PM · Sep 22, 2024 · 34.6K Views
Twitter screenhot individual. @individual_kind: Looks like he is holding more than a dozen. 🥚 (with zoomed in photo of Vance holding a trray of eggs)

It’s no secret that grocery prices in the U.S. have gone up in the past few years. But the Republican vice presidential nominee should have probably thought to look at the prices behind him before waxing poetic about high prices. It’s only the latest misstep from Vance, who has recently shown ignorance about labor law, angered a crowd of firefighters, and even flubbed a question about what makes him smile.

The inflation in grocery costs has less to do with the president’s actions and more to do with the corporations that own grocery stores. But Vance missed what would have been a very easy jab at Harris, and the campaign somehow didn’t see the clear problems in the video they posted. And yet, Vance and Donald Trump remain neck and neck with Harris and Tim Walz in the polls.

MAGA Sheriff Faces Consequences for Threatening Own Constituents

Portage County, Ohio, Sheriff Bruce Zuchowski asked his constituents to report local Kamala Harris supporters.

A campaign sign for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

The Ohio sheriff who likened migrants to “human locusts” and threatened local supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris is reaping the consequences of his own actions.

In a 3–1 vote on Friday, the Portage County elections board agreed to strip Sheriff Bruce Zuchowski of his election security duties, formally removing the sheriff’s office from providing security during in-person voting, reported The Daily Beast.

Earlier this month, the Ohio sheriff willingly threw himself into electoral politics in a Facebook post that referred to Harris as a “Flip-Flopping, Laughing Hyena,” inviting his constituents to send him the personal addresses of locals with Harris’s campaign signs in their yards.

He then proceeded to double down on the dangerous rhetoric after a county commissioner from the local Republican committee resigned over the comments.

“I believe that those who vote for individuals with liberal policies have to accept responsibility for their actions!” Zuchowski wrote.

The Ohio secretary of state’s office decided Tuesday that Zuchowski’s divisive statements didn’t break state election laws.

“Our office has reviewed the comments and determined they don’t violate election laws,” Dan Lusheck, deputy communications director for the Ohio secretary of state, told the Akron Beacon Journal. “The sheriff can speak and answer for himself about the substance of his remarks. We’re focused on running an election that begins with military and overseas ballots going out this Friday.”

The area’s local NAACP chapter responded to Zuchowski’s statements by holding an emergency meeting, which drew more than 100 attendees.

“They’re afraid to vote. They’re afraid to put signs in their yard,” Frank Hairson, the communications chair of the NAACP chapter, told the Ravenna Record-Courier.

Zuchowski’s posts were seemingly made in reference to a virulent conspiracy theory spread by top Republicans, including Donald Trump and J.D. Vance, about Haitian immigrants eating other residents’ pets in Springfield, Ohio—roughly 200 miles away from the sheriff’s district.

Since Vance and Trump began elevating the myth around the time of the second presidential debate, Springfield has received at least 33 bomb threats, forcing it to evacuate and temporarily shutter several of its schools, colleges, festivals, and a significant portion of its government facilities, including City Hall, the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, the Ohio License Bureau, the Springfield Academy of Excellence, and Fulton Elementary School.

Multiple city officials, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine, and even Vance himself have stated in no uncertain terms that the conspiracy is false.

Trump Promises Immigrants He Wants to Deport Will Get Serial Numbers

Donald Trump’s immigration threats are getting even more disturbing.

Donald Trump gestures and speaks during a campaign event
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Immigrants are no longer welcome in Donald Trump’s America. Instead, the Republican presidential nominee posited that under his potential second administration, he would round up and mass-deport noncitizens based on their “serial numbers.”

Speaking with Full Measure’s Sharyl Attkisson, Trump argued that the United States—which was founded by and has historically been a nation of immigrants—shouldn’t be a “dumping ground” for newcomers.

“But we’re getting the criminals out, and we’re going to do that fast, and we know who they are, and the local police know their names, and they know their serial numbers,” Trump said. “They know everything about them.”

Trump has regularly mimicked Adolf Hitler during his campaign. But the mention of serial numbers—a terrifying echo of the identification numbers forcibly tattooed on concentration camp prisoners—is one of his most chilling references yet.

“We’re not a dumping ground,” Trump continued. “We’re going to get all of those people out, and we’re going to get them out fast.”

Attkisson then asked Trump how he even intends to carry out mass deportations. “A lot of the millions of people have had children who are American citizens, and don’t you think the first time there is an image on television of a family tearfully being told to board a bus that that whole program would end?” she asked.

Trump agreed and offered a solution: less media coverage.

“That’s right,” he said. “If you take a young woman with two beautiful children, and you put her on a bus, and it ends up on the front page of every newspaper. It makes it a lot harder.

“You put one wrong person onto a bus or onto an airplane, and your radical left lunatics will try and make it sound like the worst thing that’s ever happened,” he added.

Read more about Trump’s immigration plans:

J.D. Vance Delivers a Word Salad on Mark Robinson’s Latest Scandal

J.D. Vance had the worst possible defense for Mark Robinson.

J.D. Vance stands with his arms up during a Donald Trump rally.
Matthew Hatcher/Getty Images

J.D. Vance gave a completely incoherent answer when asked about the sex scandal that has pretty much decimated North Carolina Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson.

A bombshell report last week alleged that Robinson, the state’s current lieutenant governor, had written on a pornography website’s message board about wanting to own slaves, peeping in women’s locker rooms, and enjoying transgender porn. He’d also apparently called himself a “Black Nazi.”

During an interview Saturday with NBC Philadelphia, Vance was asked whether he believed Robinson, who had denied ever making the posts.

“I don’t not believe him. I don’t believe him. I just think you have to let these things sometimes play out in the court of public opinion,” Vance replied.

“He’s going to make whatever arguments he wants to make. I’m sure the news media and others are going to investigate these comments further. I just think that fundamentally it’s Mark Robinson and the people of North Carolina that get to decide whether he’s their governor,” he said.

Vance was also asked whether he was comfortable with Robinson being the Republican nominee.

“The allegations are pretty far out there, of course, but I know that allegations aren’t necessarily reality,” said Vance.

This is a distinctly new attitude for Vance, who has been quick to run with outlandish “allegations” in the past. The Ohio senator has spent the past two weeks elevating false claims of Haitian immigrants eating their neighbors’ pets, based on nothing more than scant reports that could not be verified and were ultimately debunked.

When asked whether he would take the stage with Robinson, Vance said that he and Donald Trump have no plans to appear with him again, adding that “when we go to places typically we hold our own events.” Robinson has appeared at events with Trump multiple times.

Last week, Trump’s campaign said they were not planning to pull the former president’s endorsement of Robinson.

Mark Robinson’s Campaign Is Collapsing as His Staffers Ditch Him

Things are going terribly for the Republican gubernatorial candidate.

Mark Robinson
Leon Neal/Getty Images

In the wake of his porn website scandal, North Carolina gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson’s campaign is quickly falling apart.

Almost all of his staff members resigned Sunday night, including four senior staffers: his campaign manager Chris Rodriguez, finance director Heather Whillier, deputy campaign manager Jason Rizk, and campaign consultant Conrad Pogorzelski III, according to a statement from the campaign.

Twitter screenshot Michael Hyland @MichaelWNCN: BREAKING: Senior adviser, campaign manager, finance director and deputy campaign manager have all resigned from @markrobinsonNC campaign #ncpol @wncn @Queen_City_News @wnct9 @myfox8 (with screenshot of statement)

Robinson has ignored calls from his fellow Republicans to drop out of the race, and the deadline for withdrawing was Thursday. While Donald Trump is still endorsing him, neither the former president nor his running mate, J.D. Vance, will be appearing at any future rallies with Robinson.

In a statement, Robinson, who is also North Carolina’s lieutenant governor, tried to downplay the staff departures.

“I appreciate the efforts of these team members who have made the difficult choice to step away from the campaign, and I wish them well in their future endeavors,” Robinson said. “I look forward to announcing new staff roles in the coming days.”

But who is going to work for Robinson’s staff after hearing about his latest scandal? On Thursday, CNN revealed that he commented on a pornography website’s message board about wanting to own slaves, enjoying transgender porn, and peeping in women’s locker rooms. He even called himself a “Black Nazi” in a comment on the Nude Africa website.

It seems to be the last straw for many Republicans, as Robinson’s previous scandals, while heinous in their own light, didn’t prompt so many calls for him to drop out of the race. Previously, he has minimized the horrors of the Holocaust, said the movie Black Panther was a plot by a “satanic marxist” to pull “shekels” out of Black audiences, likened women getting abortions to murderers, and called gay people “filth” and “maggots.”

Perhaps now Republicans are not only worried about losing the North Carolina governorship, but also the state’s electoral votes in the presidential election. The latest polls show Trump and Kamala Harris nearly deadlocked in a state that voted for the Republican in 2020. With Robinson staying in the race, Democrats might have a shot at a state that was once thought out of reach.


This story has been updated.

Republicans Are Struggling to Raise Money to Compete With Democrats

Democrats are enjoying a big fundraising lead. Vulnerable swing-district Republicans are sweating.

RNC Co-Chair Lara Trump
Omar Vega/Getty Images
Republican National Committee Co-Chair Lara Trump

With about a month and a half before November’s elections, a sizable fundraising gap is opening up between the two parties, as they vie to claim congressional majorities. The Democratic Party is relatively flush, raking in money for their congressional candidates. Their totals ended up dwarfing the Republicans’ effort last month.

In August, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee raised $22.3 million, eclipsing the National Republican Congressional Committee’s total of $9.7 million. The NRCC has a total of $70.75 million of cash on hand, more than $16 million less than the DCCC.  

It’s more bad news for the GOP, which also had poor fundraising to report for July, when it spent more money than it took in. The party has been reeling ever since Kamala Harris entered the presidential race in July and set fundraising records. Earlier this month, leading Republicans in Congress panicked about a huge money gap between them and the Democrats, and were begging donors to send more cash their way. 

Their pleas don’t appear to have helped much, if at all. The party lost its key fundraiser when former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted last year, leaving his replacement, Mike Johnson, with big shoes to fill. The party’s shortfall is particularly perilous to the sixteen House Republicans who represent districts that Joe Biden won in 2020. All of their races are considered to be close contests, and any gap in funding gives Democrats an extra advantage.  

The Republicans in these vulnerable swing district can’t expect much, if any help from Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, either. His campaign and associated political groups have been funneling profits to his businesses to the tune of $28 million since he first ran for office in 2015.  

Now that his daughter-in-law Lara Trump is a co-chair of the Republican National Committee, Trump also wields considerable influence, if not outright control, over the party’s funds. Considering how high his personal debts and legal expenses are, it’s not hard to imagine the former president and convicted felon diverting the party’s cashflow to his own needful coffers. It seems that the GOP will have to rely on whatever its billionaire friends can pony up.   

Trump Makes Shocking Decision on Scandal-Ridden Mark Robinson

Turns out, Mark Robinson still hasn’t done enough to turn off Donald Trump.

Mark Robinson stands at a podium during a Donald Trump rally
Grant Baldwin/Getty Images

Donald Trump has chosen to stand by his man, even though that man allegedly self-described as a “Black Nazi!” in a comment on a porn-site message board.

North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson, who is currently running for governor, was the subject of a bombshell report Thursday that revealed the Trump ally had allegedly written on a pornography website’s message board about wanting to own slaves, peeping in women’s locker rooms, and enjoying transgender porn.

Trump spokesperson Karoline Leavitt told NBC News Friday morning that rumors that Trump was planning to pull his endorsement of Robinson were “false.”

“President Trump’s campaign is focused on winning the White House and saving the country,” said Leavitt, without addressing the allegations about Robinson at all.

“North Carolina is a vital part of that plan. We are confident that as voters compare the Trump record of a strong economy, low inflation, a secure border, and safe streets, with the failure of Biden-Harris, then President Trump will win the Tarheel State once again.”

Some within the Trump campaign have been pushing for the former president to withdraw his endorsement. Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley and Republican lawmakers in North Carolina planned to speak with Trump privately about dropping Robinson, one person familiar with the conversations told NBC. But it seems unlikely that the Republican presidential nominee will go back on his word—as unreliable as it is—for fear of alienating his fans.

“The problem with it is, while he may feel like that might be a smart move—and I don’t know that he does—there’s no way in hell he’s going to risk the base, which will go furious,” one former senior Trump official told NBC.

Trump’s Failing Stock Just Hit Its Lowest Point Yet

Donald Trump can finally sell his Truth Social stock. Too bad it’s worth so little now.

A phone screen shows Donald Trump’s Truth Social account
Matt Cardy/Getty Images

Trump Media & Technology Group stock dropped to its lowest price yet Friday, the first day Donald Trump is allowed to sell his shares in the social media venture. 

Shares dropped more than 7 percent to $13.68 per share, putting the value of the company at $2.74 billion. It’s a far cry from when the stock price peaked at nearly $80 per share in March after its initial public offering.

Trump owns 115 million shares of TMTG, about 57 percent of the company, and the stock seems to fluctuate based on public sentiment toward the former president and convicted felon. His poor debate performance against Kamala Harris last week caused a steep drop in the stock price, and the stock also took a hit last month when Trump posted on X (formerly Twitter) after a long hiatus.  

Until Friday, the Republican presidential nominee wasn’t allowed to sell any of his shares unless he had permission from the company’s board of directors. Last week, he promised that he wouldn’t immediately sell his shares, giving the stock a slight bump. But that was quickly erased after the debate and with Friday’s arrival. 

Now what was once a sure cash cow for Trump has lost most of its value, and the former president must be tempted to squeeze whatever profit he can out of it. He has unpaid bills, legal fees, and a massive fraud judgment against him in New York, where the state might seize his assets. He has resorted to absurd moneymaking schemes such as selling NFT trading cards, his own branded Bibles, his own cryptocurrency scam, and assassination-themed sneakers

The moment he decides to sell his stock, though, investors’ confidence will plummet and the stock will hit the floor, and that might be the end of Truth Social. The question is what Trump loves more: a quick and easy profit, or his own branded social network. 

Watch: James Comer Has Wild Excuse for Pro-Trump Probe into Tim Walz

James Comer has no excuse for his blatantly political investigation into Tim Walz.

James Comer smiles and points at reporters
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty Images

Republican Representative James Comer attacked Minnesota Governor Tim Walz’s family Friday, while defending his blatantly political investigation into the Democratic vice presidential nominee.

During an appearance on Fox Business’s Mornings With Maria, Comer tried to defend the House Oversight Committee’s investigation into Walz, which was announced last month, alleging that the Democratic governor has a “long-standing cozy relationship with China.”

“Yeah, that’s a scary family there,” Comer said of Walz’s family. “It looks like the type of family that’s been indoctrinated.”

As Comer spoke, host Maria Bartiromo looked horrified, and the producers cut away from her.

“They believe that there is a better way to do business,” Comer said. “Some of the things that the Walzes have said about China, their affection for China. That’s very concerning for me because we don’t want to set our business model like China.”

It’s clear, however, that Comer’s investigation is a political ploy to help out Donald Trump. The same week Comer announced his probe into Walz’s ties with China, the House Oversight Committee chair also announced that he would investigate Kamala Harris’s work on the southern border. He previously attempted a similar gambit by spearheading an investigation into the Biden family—which crumbled, having not produced any evidence of the president’s, or his family’s, supposed wrongdoings.

Representative Maxwell Frost, a Democrat from Florida, eviscerated Comer Thursday for going after Walz, as well as his other obvious steps to help Trump.

Frost accused Comer of violating House rules to hold a blatantly political hearing on the alleged failures of the Biden-Harris administration. “How can we allow this hearing to continue, when we are in direct violation of the House rules?” Frost asked.

“This committee functions as an extension of the Trump campaign,” Frost said. “First, we went after President Biden with a nonsense impeachment hearing. Then we went after his son. Now we’re going after the vice president because she’s the nominee. And my question is, Mr. Chairman, are we going after Tim Walz next, next week?

“I hear from my staff that you’re planning a hearing on Governor Tim Walz, even though he’s been governor for five years and his name hasn’t been uttered in this room, or in this committee, until something happened recently—oh yes, he became the vice presidential nominee. Is he next?”

During Frost’s takedown, Representative Jamie Raskin could be seen grinning.

Comer was completely unable to defend his blatant politicking. “His son is going to jail,” Comer said, speaking about Hunter Biden. Frost clarified he was asking about Walz, and Comer sighed, “Ohhh, I’ll have to check.”

Frost said anyone involved in the “blatant use of official resources for a political campaign” should be “ashamed of themselves.”

Clearly, Comer is shameless, and so bent on helping Trump he’ll say anything, no matter how egregious.

Pro-Trump Election Officials Disrupt Voting Process in Key State

Donald Trump’s allies in Georgia are working to help him win the state.

Donald Trump stands in front of a microphone
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Donald Trump’s allies on the Georgia State Election Board voted 3–2 Friday to require the state’s counties to count all election ballots by hand, which would considerably delay the results and cast doubt on the process.

The move comes thanks to the pro-Trump majority on the board, which has taken several steps in the hopes of helping the former president win the state in November. The three board members have sought to make it easier for county election officials to reject election results, and have had an ethics complaint lodged against them for trying to make significant changes to the rules governing Georgia’s elections.

The Georgia Attorney General’s Office warned Thursday that the rule changes would likely be considered illegal or invalid under state law and break ballot chain of custody.

The new rule, one of 11 that the board planned to vote on Friday, would require ballots to be counted by hand the night of the election or by the next day, which many local election officials say would be impossible in most of the state’s counties. In public comments Friday, some officials said it was too late to institute rules that require staff training and funds they don’t have.

“Military ballots have already been issued,” said Irwin County elections supervisor Ethan Compton. “The election has begun. This is not the time to change the rules. That will only lower the integrity of our elections.”

Saira Draper, a Democrat in Georgia’s state legislature and an election lawyer, saw the rule change as a blatant effort to cause chaos on Election Day.

“It makes me question whether members of this board are operating in good faith,” Draper said. “Putting 11, maybe 12 new rules into play days before Election Day is a grift. We are setting up our counties to fail. Why do we know they are going to fail? Because they are telling you that.”

A Georgia judge has already thrown out one right-wing attempt to mess with certification procedures in the state, and it seems likely that this new rule will be challenged in court too. But it won’t stop Trump’s allies in the state, who are strategizing behind the scenes to help the former president and convicted felon. If they succeed, they could end up nullifying a Democratic victory in the state.