Phillies’ Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber complete historic feats in blowout win over Mets
It was an offensive onslaught for the Phillies on Saturday.

Freddy Peralta became Freddy Krueger on Saturday, mortifying anyone wearing a Mets uniform but scaring exactly nobody he faced.
It was an offensive onslaught for the Phillies on Saturday.
A former GOP congressman is calling out a failed Trump administration investigation into voter fraud.Adam Kinzinger described how Trump set out to prove "stolen elections," specifically by looking at voting machines. Ultimately, the investigation failed to dig up any instances of fraud, Kinzinger said.He was referring to a probe that stemmed from a Trump executive order from last year, according to Reuters, which broke the exclusive. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence produced the report, but Reuters reported that it found no evidence that machines that will be used in the midterms caused votes to flip."They found that not a single vote was switched anywhere," Kinzinger said. "They have this report, but what are they doing? They're delaying the release of the report."He blasted that, "instead of being grown-ups and admitting it, they are not releasing the report. It's been delayed," and lamented, "They're going to lie, and when they find out they lied, they'll never admit it."
Scotland's tough World Cup loss on Friday did not come without controversy.
"No one puts on a spectacle like America, and no one is as friendly and as welcoming and as hospitable as the American people."
Friday on MS NOW's "The Last Word," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, also known as the SAVE America Act, was the "most anti-election democracy thing that’s ever been proposed." The post Schumer: SAVE America Act ‘Worst, Most Anti-Election Democracy Things That’s Ever Been Proposed’ appeared first on Breitbart.
Pennsylvania's Supreme Court, including two Democrat justices, ordered outside scrutiny of Soros-backed DA Larry Krasner's office over unreliable post-conviction concessions in murder cases.
House Democratic leadership's preferred candidate in Maine's 2nd district, state Sen. Joe Baldacci, lost his primary to progressive rival Matt Dunlap, state election officials announced early Friday morning.Why it matters: This is the second time this month that a candidate backed by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has fallen short in their primary.California State Assembly member Jasmeet Bains, the DCCC-backed candidate in California's 22nd district, failed to make it to the general election, losing out to progressive Randy Villegas.The DCCC has sparked considerable tension among House Democrats by intervening in these races, with some lawmakers threatening to withhold their dues to the House Democratic campaign arm.Dunlap, Maine's state auditor, defeated both Baldacci and former congressional staffer Jordan Wood in a ranked-choice primary.Catch up quick: Baldacci was one of several candidates in contested primaries who were added to the DCCC's coveted "Red to Blue" list last month.The program is generally meant to help Democratic candidates in open or Republican-held battleground seats defeat their GOP opponents.But party leadership determined that Baldacci and several other candidates in districts across the country had the best chance of flipping or holding their districts.Yes, but: The DCCC's investment was minuscule compared to how much they spent in other primaries in California, Texas and Pennsylvania.They ran a $7,500 joint ad buy with Baldacci, whose own campaign spent nearly $250,000 on ads, according to AdImpact.Outside group Real Change PAC, which has suspected ties to Republicans, spent $500,000 on ads attacking Baldacci.What's next: Dunlap will face off with Republican former Gov. Paul LePage in the race to succeed Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine).The district is seen as one of the GOP's top potential pickups in November, having gone for President Trump by nine percentage points in 2024.
CNN on Friday aired a supercut of Republican senators criticizing President Donald Trump’s Iran deal, with host Audie Cornish describing leaders as “kind of up in arms” over the president’s Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Iranian regime.Kurt Volker, an American diplomat and former U.S. ambassador to NATO, joined CNN to discuss the deal, telling Cornish “there's a lot to play out here.”As Cornish described, “the people who are loudest in their complaints about this deal are Republicans.”“We're just hearing so many senators saying similar things,” Cornish said before rolling the supercut.“Everything I've heard about it causes me concern,” Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) said.“I do have concerns that certain aspects of this deal might be a step in the wrong direction,” Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AK) noted. “I have to know where that money is coming from, because I don't think my constituents are going to be really happy about it, if that's all U.S. taxpayer dollars,” Sen. Joni Earnst told reporters. “History demonstrates that giving billions of dollars to theocratic lunatics who want to murder us is an exceptionally bad idea,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) argued.“So people are kind of up in arms about many things, but specifically, the $300 billion potential reconstruction and development fund, which is supposed to be an investment fund,” Cornish said. “And Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi is the top Republican. He was saying look, I get that it's not funded by taxpayer dollars but it's still a payoff. And he's saying it's a payoff that would make [Former President Barack] Obama’s 2015 deal look like a pittance by comparison.”“Yes, that's exactly right,” Volker agreed. "That's the one part of this thing that is the most mystifying at all: Why there's any money changing hands here.” “But they're saying there isn't, right. They're arguing that money isn't changing hands,” Cornish noted.“Well, they say that, but then you look and you say sanctions are being lifted. Iran is getting oil sales. There will be a reconstruction fund that the gulf states will organize. That's money,” Volker replied.