Here's what to know about the controversial Montana Republican.
Greg Gianforte, the Republican candidate in Montana's special election charged with body slamming a reporter hours before the polls opened on Thursday, also has troubling ties to alleged white supremacists.
Gianforte donated to the campaigns of both Taylor Rose, whom the Southern Poverty Law Center has described as a white nationalist, and Robert Saunders, who allegedly has a history of espousing anti-black racist views.
Gianforte is also linked to Idaho preacher Douglas Wilson, who has suggested in his writings that the "black family has never been stronger than it was under slavery" and that women are "created to be dependent and responsive to a man." Gianforte received a $2,700 campaign donation from Saunders.
"It's not normal to support white supremacists," four Montana rabbis wrote in a letter to several newspapers in the state. "White supremacy is not a Montana value."
The Flash/Supergirl musical ep was so good! Give Darren Criss a Music Meister spin off where he’s teaching people lessons by trapping them in genre simulaitons.
Snapchat told a gun safety charity it might run NRA ads on the charity's anti-gun violence awareness campaign — which would have featured videos starring families who lost their loved ones to firearms — if the charity didn't pay Snapchat for advertising, emails provided to Mic by a source close to the exchange show.
Shocker. A Silicon Valley tech company run by shitheads!
More than 24 hours past the evacuation deadline, police are busy arresting any remaining protesters.
One day after the deadline to evacuate the Dakota Access Pipeline opposition camps set up near Cannon Ball, North Dakota, police arrested at least 40 protesters, CNN correspondent Sara Sidner reported, citing the local sheriff's department.
In a series of tweets, Sidner said the roads surrounding the Oceti Sakowin camp had been blocked off by police vehicles.
An emergency evacuation order signed by Gov. Doug Burgum set the deadline to leave the camp at 2 p.m. on Wednesday. But on Thursday, nearly 24 hours later, dozens of protesters remained.
Although CNN reported around 100 protesters left voluntarily on Wednesday evening, 10 arrests were reportedly made that night as well.
More than one notable mistake was made at the Academy Awards.
“Janet Patterson, who passed away in October, was a four-time Oscar-nominated costume designer for her work on The Piano, The Portrait of a Lady, Oscar and Lucinda and Bright Star. The photo featured in the segment was of Jan Chapman, an Australian producer who is still alive.“