Rock band the White Stripes have withdrawn their federal lawsuit against President-elect Donald Trump, his campaign and his aide Margo Martin.
The White Stripes filed the lawsuit against Trump in September, shortly after Jack White vowed to take legal action against Martin over her boss's release of a video featuring their song "Seven Nation Army," the Guardian reports.
In the lawsuit, which was filed amid Trump's re-election campaign, the White Stripes noted that they "vehemently oppose the policies adopted and the actions taken by the defendant Trump while he was president, as well as those he proposed for the second term he is seeking."
Jack White, a longtime critic of Trump, issued a lengthy statement following the Republican's victory in the US presidential election.
"Trump won the majority of the vote. End of story. Americans elected a known, obvious fascist and now America will get whatever this self-proclaimed dictator wants to implement from here on out. We all know what he's capable of: Project 2025, deportations, abortion bans at the national level, repealing the two-term limit, supporting Putin and his war, shutting down the Department of Education, worsening climate change, limiting the rights of the LGBTQ community, controlling the Department of Justice, keeping the minimum wage low, etc. It's amazing what a fraud this is managed to fool so many Americans, not once, but twice," White wrote.
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