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Showing posts with label JIM BANKS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JIM BANKS. Show all posts

Monday, October 25, 2021

MAGA insurrectionists rat out GOP House conspirators

 


Today's Top Stories:

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Jan. 6 "Stop the Steal" protest organizers say they participated in "dozens" of planning meetings with members of Congress and White House staff

None of this is shocking. All of it is appalling.



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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Obama torches Virginia Republican Glenn Youngkin at gubernatorial rally

"There are some things more important than getting elected, and maybe American democracy is one of those things."


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Adam Schiff on Trump finally testifying for Jan. 6 Committee

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: About time.


Gov. DeSantis touts bonuses for unvaccinated police who relocate to Florida
The anti-science Republican is pushing legislation to provide $5,000 bonuses to police officers who relocate to Florida in order to avoid COVID-19 vaccine mandates elsewhere. Perfect.



Manchin reportedly agreeable to wealth tax for Biden plan
Pivotal Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin appears to be on board with White House proposals for new taxes on billionaires and certain corporations to help pay for President Biden’s scaled-back social services and climate change package.



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"Molecularly impossible": Fauci blasts Rand Paul for COVID lab theory

"You can ask any person of good faith who's a virologist, and they will tell you, absolutely clearly, that that would be molecularly impossible."


Disgraced former governor is recast as MAGA warrior in Senate bid
Eric Greitens resigned the governorship in 2018, midway through his first term, following allegations that he sexually assaulted a woman. Many Missouri Republicans view him as an opportunist who has shamelessly recast himself as a MAGA warrior to revive his political career.



Twitter suspends GOP Rep. Jim Banks for intentionally misgendering trans official
Banks, a staunch Trump supporter who backed his efforts to overturn the 2020 election, tweeted from his official account last week: "The title of first female four-star officer gets taken by a man."


​​Donald Trump Jr. selling t-shirts mocking Alec Baldwin set shooting
Of course he is.


GOP state senator under fire for racist remarks
Oklahoma State Senator David Rader, a Republican, is under fire for referring to Asian American households as "yellow families" and called pushback to his use of the term an "Asian distraction."


Fox News anchor Chris Wallace dubs White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki "one of the best press secretaries ever"
He's not wrong.


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Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...




Friday, October 22, 2021

House holds Steve Bannon in criminal contempt

 


CDC expands eligibility for COVID booster shots, endorses ‘mix and match’ approach

Today's Top Stories:

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9 Republicans join all 220 Democrats in House vote to hold Steve Bannon in criminal contempt

For those keeping score at home, 202 House Republicans voted against holding Steve Bannon in criminal contempt of Congress for defying a subpoena.


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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Jim Jordan embarrassed by Dem. Jamie Raskin in House hearing tongue-lashing

The Ohio Republican's flimsy explanation for voting against criminal contempt charges for Steve Bannon caught the full ire of Rep. Raskin, a constitutional law expert.



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Ted Cruz, Tucker Carlson humiliate themselves with vax lies

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Unreal.


DOJ adds two top prosecutors to Matt Gaetz's sex trafficking investigation
The Washington-based prosecutors, one with expertise in child exploitation crimes and the other a top official in the DOJ's Public Integrity Section, have been on the Florida-based case since at least July, looking into whether Gaetz violated federal law by providing goods or payments to a 17-year-old girl in exchange for sex.



Five veterans quit Sen. Kyrsten Sinema advisory board in protest, calling her "one of the principal obstacles to progress"
In a scathing letter to the senator, the members of the group, who informally advise Sinema on military and veterans' issues in Arizona, charged her with "hanging your constituents out to dry."



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Biden says US has "commitment" to defend Taiwan from Chinese attack

President Biden on Thursday didn’t hesitate when asked whether the US would come to Taiwan’s defense if China attacked, with White House officials stressing there has been no change in policy.



Liz Cheney calls out Jim Banks for falsely signing letter as the ranking member of January 6 committee
Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, who serves on the select committee, called Banks' behavior "delusional and fantastical" and suggested that posing as a ranking member of the committee could break House rules.


DC assistant police chief says she was told to "have an abortion or be fired"
Chanel Dickerson, one of 10 Black women who filed a class-action lawsuit last month against the city alleging widespread discrimination, said this week that as an 18-year-old cadet she was told she had to get an abortion to keep her job.


Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick paid out his first $25,000 voter fraud bounty to a progressive poll worker in Pennsylvania who caught a Republican voting illegally
Perfect.


Marjorie Taylor Greene screaming again, this time with Rep. Cheney on House floor over "Jewish space lasers" comment
Of course she did.


Anti-vax Republican, who worked for the Trump campaign and embraced QAnon, battling COVID-19: "I've lost my joy"
Lauren Witzke, the 2020 GOP Senate nominee in Delaware, previously said coronavirus vaccines were part of a satanic plan to cause "mass death."


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Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...






Thursday, July 22, 2021

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Where the 1/6 debate goes next




 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MERIDITH MCGRAW

Presented by

AARP

YOU’RE FIRED — ICYMI, and how could you have, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi vetoed two Republican nominees — Rep. Jim Banks of Indiana and Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio — from the bipartisan panel charged with investigating the deadly riots that erupted Jan. 6 on Capitol Hill.

“The unprecedented nature of January 6th demands this unprecedented decision,” Pelosi said in a statement, pointing to the members’ “actions” and “statements.”

Pelosi and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who responded by pulling all of his committee members from the panel, must each think they’re playing a winning hand. But two-party politics is a zero-sum game, so one of them must be playing from behind.

Nightly’s instant take: This isn’t as bad for Pelosi as many are saying.

Pelosi has an underappreciated asset in this scrum: the minority party’s “Never Trump” wing, who are often maligned by partisans on both sides, but who are also hellbent on making sure Republicans confront the facts of all that transpired on Jan. 6.

Donald Trump’s insistence on remaining in his position as the de facto leader of the Republican Party has given the Never Trump movement a second wind and a new mission. And it has prolonged an intra-party debate that otherwise might have ended with the election of President Joe Biden.

Rep. Liz Cheney, Republican from Wyoming

There’s still a Republican on the committee, after all. Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who was kicked out of her high-ranking GOP post for pointing a finger at Trump’s actions leading up to Jan. 6 and secured a seat on the committee via Pelosi herself, said today she supported the decision to remove Banks and Jordan. She even said one of the two men might be a “material witness” to events leading up to the attack.

Pelosi’s move shocked much of Washington, but many Democrats feel it was unavoidable. Among a sea of hardcore Trump supporters in the House, Banks and Jordan have proven to be some of the most outspoken and experienced in Trump-era partisan warfare. McCarthy’s decision to place the two men, who both voted against counting some of Biden’s electoral votes, on the committee showed that many Republicans view the investigation into Jan. 6 as nothing more than a chance to defend the former president against political attacks and continue their own attempts to spin the narrative about Jan. 6 on its head.

In the months following the deadly riots, Trump and his allies began a campaign to change public perception of what happened on Capitol Hill that day. Lawmakers and aides on the Hill and reporters on the scene will tell you that even the harrowing scenes displayed on television didn’t capture the horror and violence that erupted as members of Congress tried to carry out their constitutional duty. Trump has tried to recast what unfolded up the street from him on Pennsylvania Avenue as an ordinary political protest held by “peaceful people,” “great people.”

Trump has also begun to raise questions about the identity of the Capitol police officer who shot one of his supporters, Ashli Babbitt, an Air Force veteran and QAnon follower, as she and others tried to beat down doors that led to the Speaker’s Lobby near where members of Congress were hiding.

A Trump adviser said the former president is just “raising questions” and that Babbitt’s death should be investigated. Certainly any death that happened because of violence within the halls of Congress that day should be investigated. But Trump’s recent focus on Babbitt has helped turn her into a martyr for the right and has shifted attention away from why she and others broke into the Capitol on Jan. 6 and what they aimed to do while they were inside.

Trump and his allies want the public to view the Jan. 6 investigation as a “partisan political charade,” as Jordan said in a statement following Pelosi’s decision. Pelosi’s decision to pull Banks and Jordan off the committee in some ways helps their argument. And as GOP strategist Doug Heye pointed out in a tweet, one of the Democrats on the panel, Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, voted to object to the certification of Ohio’s electoral votes for George W. Bush back in 2005.

So here we are, back to square one. McCarthy has said Republicans plan to pursue their own investigation. What began as a partisan attack on the Capitol — when Trump supporters rioted in the halls of Congress — will now officially be investigated twice, in a partisan manner. And one of McCarthy’s initial objections to a Jan. 6 committee — that a congressional investigation would be “duplicative” — will now come true.

Members being rejected from a panel? Unusual. Congress doubling up work? Now that we’ve seen before.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas for us at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author directly at mmcgraw@politico.com or @meridithmcgraw.

A message from AARP:

Americans are sick of paying the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs — more than three times what people in other countries pay for the same medicine. The President, members of Congress in both parties, and the people agree: we must cut drug prices. By giving Medicare the power to negotiate, we can save hundreds of billions of dollars. Tell Congress: Cut prescription drug prices now.

 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Infrastructure vote fails as senators try to salvage bipartisan deal: Senate Republicans blocked moving forward on a bipartisan infrastructure bill that’s still being negotiated today . Members of the group insist they’re unbothered. The vote amounted to a setback to a key priority of President Joe Biden, although members of both parties expect at least one more try in the coming days. GOP centrists say they may be willing to provide the votes as early as Monday, when they think discussions will conclude.

— Top general on Afghanistan: ‘I don’t think the end game is yet written’: The nation’s top general expressed confidence today in the Afghan security forces’ ability to fend off a takeover by the Taliban, despite significant gains by the group across the country and reports that Kabul could fall in a matter of months. “I don’t think the end game is yet written,” Gen. Mark Milley, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters during a briefing at the Pentagon. “A negative outcome, a Taliban automatic takeover, is not a foregone conclusion.”

 

SUBSCRIBE TO "THE RECAST" TODAY: Power is shifting in Washington and in communities across the country. More people are demanding a seat at the table, insisting that politics is personal and not all policy is equitable. The Recast is a twice-weekly newsletter that explores the changing power dynamics in Washington and breaks down how race and identity are recasting politics and policy in America. Get fresh insights, scoops and dispatches on this crucial intersection from across the country and hear critical new voices that challenge business as usual. Don't miss out, SUBSCRIBE . Thank you to our sponsor, Intel.

 
 

— Warren warns Biden administration on PPP fees: Sen. Elizabeth Warren is pressing the Biden administration to explain the extent to which accountants and lawyers who helped businesses receive aid under the Paycheck Protection Program may have been shortchanged for their services. Warren, in a June 14 letter to the Small Business Administration, obtained by POLITICO today, raised concerns about “contradictory guidance” from the agency that may have prevented businesses from receiving fees for helping employers file applications with banks for forgivable loans under the nearly $1 trillion rescue program. Warren’s office has not yet received a response from the SBA. The agency did not respond immediately to a request for comment on the letter.

— Cash shortage threatens White House global vaccine effort: In an echo of World War II, the Biden White House announced last month that the United States would become an “arsenal of vaccines” — sending hundreds of millions of doses abroad to help save the world from Covid-19. Now that sweeping effort is in jeopardy, officials warn. The virus has killed more people worldwide already this year than it did in all of 2020. And, amid a bureaucratic battle with the White House, the agency charged with distributing the shots — the U.S. Agency for International Development — is scrambling to figure out how to pay for them.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin (L) and Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley (R) participate in a news briefing at the Pentagon.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin (L) and Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley (R) participate in a news briefing at the Pentagon. | Alex Wong/Getty Images

— Austin defends Milley following Trump book revelationsDefense Secretary Lloyd Austin today said he had “tremendous faith and confidence” in Milley after reports that the Joint Chiefs chair sought to prevent former President Donald Trump from perpetrating a coup in the aftermath of the 2020 election. “I’ve known the chairman for a long time. We’ve fought together. We’ve served a couple of times in the same units,” Austin told reporters at the Pentagon. “I’m not guessing at his character. He doesn’t have a political bone in his body.”

— Biden diverges with Canada and extends border restrictions until at least Aug. 21: The Biden administration renewed its restrictions at the U.S.-Canada land border for at least another month, a move today that signals a new divergence between the neighbors in public-health policy at the frontier. The move comes a couple of days after the Trudeau government took the first steps to reopen the frontier to fully vaccinated, nonessential American travelers.

— Opioid lawsuits on verge of settlements with 4 companies: The yearslong effort by state and local governments in the U.S. to force the pharmaceutical industry to help pay to fix a nationwide opioid addiction and overdose crisis took a major step forward Tuesday when lawyers for local governments announced they were on the verge of a $26 billion settlement with the nation’s three biggest drug distribution companies and the drugmaker Johnson & Johnson.

 

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IDEA OF THE DAY

TURBOTAX FOR ALL — Nightly is interested in new ideas about politics and policy. In Idea Of The Day, we plan to surface fresh takes on longstanding or intractable issues. Tonight, we highlight University of Chicago law professor Daniel Hemel’s Twitter thread laying out a novel fix for the IRS’ Free File tax preparation system. Here’s a snippet:

“A lightning-fast path to free user-friendly tax filing — the only path that could realistically be up & running by the 2022 filing season — would be for the federal government to pay online tax prep providers on a per-return basis for each return e-filed through their site”

Read the whole thread. If you have a unique policy idea or solution for us, send it our way at nightly@politico.com.

AROUND THE WORLD

UKRAINIAN VISIT IN THE PIPELINE — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will meet with Biden next month in Washington, the White House announced today.

The news of Zelensky’s White House visit, scheduled for Aug. 30, comes at a delicate moment in the alliance between Washington and Kyiv, as the United States nears a deal with Germany on the controversial Nord Stream 2 pipeline.

Ukraine has expressed concerns about the project, which would deliver inexpensive natural gas from Russia to Germany via a 764-mile-long pipeline under the Baltic Sea — potentially reducing Ukraine’s role in regional energy commerce.

But Germany has argued the completion of Nord Stream 2 is vital to its energy security, and Russia views the pipeline as a means of expanding its influence across Europe while raking in revenue.

Amid negotiations between Washington and Berlin over the project, U.S. officials have quietly urged their counterparts in Kyiv to refrain from public criticism of the potential pact — warning that such dissent could damage the Washington-Kyiv relationship.

More on Nord Stream 2: Biden is also facing bipartisan backlash to his administration’s agreement with Germany that allows a Russian natural-gas pipeline to be completed. Congressional opponents argue that the deal is a boon to Moscow at the expense of Ukraine.

 

SUBSCRIBE TO "THE RECAST" TODAY: Power is shifting in Washington and in communities across the country. More people are demanding a seat at the table, insisting that politics is personal and not all policy is equitable. The Recast is a twice-weekly newsletter that explores the changing power dynamics in Washington and breaks down how race and identity are recasting politics and policy in America. Get fresh insights, scoops and dispatches on this crucial intersection from across the country and hear critical new voices that challenge business as usual. Don't miss out, SUBSCRIBE . Thank you to our sponsor, Intel.

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

47 percent

The percentage of New Hampshire Republicans who say they’d back Trump over other prominent Republicans, according to the Granite State Poll released today.

PARTING WORDS

Yul Moldauer of Team United States on the rings during a practice session at the Ariake Gymnastics Centre ahead of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

Yul Moldauer of Team United States on the rings during a practice session at the Ariake Gymnastics Centre ahead of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. | Harry How/Getty Images

TOKYO’S BIG EXPERIMENT — At these Olympic Games, Ryan Heath writes, nothing is off the table, even the possibility of a last-minute cancellation.

Every Olympic Games has its protest crowd, loudest in the days and weeks before the Opening Ceremonies: They argue the Games are an elite, expensive endeavor, diverting attention and money from better causes. But as the Games roll on, the protest noise tends to fade, replaced by tales and images of athletic heroism.

In Rio de Janeiro (2016) the gloss of the Olympics was juxtaposed against Brazil’s wrenching poverty and the city’s millions of slum dwellers. In Beijing (2008) concern centered on the Communist regime’s human rights abuses. Ahead of the Los Angeles Games (1984), it was suggested athletes could die competing in the smog.

The difference with Tokyo 2021 is that the global nature of Covid-19 means mistakes in Japan could turn the whole world into a victim of the Olympic Games.

A message from AARP:

It’s outrageous that Americans pay more than three times what people in other countries pay for the same medicine. And these unfair prices keep going up. Even during the pandemic and financial crisis, the prices of more than 1,000 drugs were increased. It’s time for the President and Congress to cut prescription drug prices.

Currently, Medicare is prohibited by law from using its buying power to negotiate with drug companies to get lower prices for people. This must change. Giving Medicare the power to negotiate will save hundreds of billions of dollars.

And the American people agree. In a recent AARP survey of Americans 50+, a vast majority supported allowing Medicare to negotiate with drug companies for lower prices, including 88% of Democrats and 85% of Republicans.

Tell Congress: Act now to lower prescription drug prices. Let Medicare negotiate.

 

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