Friday, June 2, 2017
Paris Agreement on climate change: Pence says Trump 'fighting for American jobs'
Vice
President Mike Pence praised President Trump's decision to withdraw
from the Paris climate accord, telling Fox News' "Hannity" Thursday that
the president was "fighting for American jobs."
Pence spoke to Fox News' Sean Hannity hours after Trump announced the U.S. was "getting out" of the deal, which the president described as "very unfair at the highest level to the United States."
US WITHDRAWS FROM PARIS CLIMATE CHANGE AGREEMENT AS TRUMP CALLS IT 'UNFAIR'
Pence described the 2015 agreement "a bad deal from the moment it was signed by the [Obama] administration."
"This is an agreement that puts an enormous burden on American consumers [and] on the American economy while allowing countries like India and China to virtually get off scot-free for a decade or more," Pence said.
The vice president also noted that the agreement amounted to "an international treaty that was never submitted to the Senate, probably because it never would have had a chance there."
Trump's decision to withdraw from the agreement was greeted with dismay by many world leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron, who reportedly called Trump to tell the president that the deal could not be renegotiated.
However, Pence insisted that the United States could re-enter the accord "under terms that will put the American economy and the American people first."
The vice president stressed that Trump had decided to withdraw from the deal after "after listening to all sides," including European leaders who had pressed the president to stay in the agreement during Trump's foreign trip last week.
"The president has demonstrated his commitment not just to keep his word, but to put American workers, American consumers, American energy, and the American people first," Pence said. "The American people get it ... This is a President who is fighting for the American people, fighting for American jobs ... America is back because they have a President in President Donald Trump who is fighting every day for them."
Pence spoke to Fox News' Sean Hannity hours after Trump announced the U.S. was "getting out" of the deal, which the president described as "very unfair at the highest level to the United States."
US WITHDRAWS FROM PARIS CLIMATE CHANGE AGREEMENT AS TRUMP CALLS IT 'UNFAIR'
Pence described the 2015 agreement "a bad deal from the moment it was signed by the [Obama] administration."
"This is an agreement that puts an enormous burden on American consumers [and] on the American economy while allowing countries like India and China to virtually get off scot-free for a decade or more," Pence said.
The vice president also noted that the agreement amounted to "an international treaty that was never submitted to the Senate, probably because it never would have had a chance there."
Trump's decision to withdraw from the agreement was greeted with dismay by many world leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron, who reportedly called Trump to tell the president that the deal could not be renegotiated.
However, Pence insisted that the United States could re-enter the accord "under terms that will put the American economy and the American people first."
The vice president stressed that Trump had decided to withdraw from the deal after "after listening to all sides," including European leaders who had pressed the president to stay in the agreement during Trump's foreign trip last week.
"The president has demonstrated his commitment not just to keep his word, but to put American workers, American consumers, American energy, and the American people first," Pence said. "The American people get it ... This is a President who is fighting for the American people, fighting for American jobs ... America is back because they have a President in President Donald Trump who is fighting every day for them."
Congress Must Act To Address The National Debt Ceiling
Washington, DC – Kendall Forward, OAN Political Correspondent
With everything going on in Washington, D.C. the national debt ceiling is an issue Congress can’t ignore much longer.
So much so, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin asked Congress to raise or suspend the ceiling before leaving for summer recess in August.
The cap on U.S. borrowing is currently set at $19.81 trillion. But, the Treasury Department is running out of ways to keep it below the limit, while floating the bills for the nation’s obligations and past lawmakers’ commitments, in full and on time.
Adjunct Professor at George Washington University, Gary Nordlinger says, “it is without a doubt the most important thing that can happen in the us.” He adds it’s critical to keeping a strong economy, saying “if we don’t have the debt ceiling increase then the United States defaults on the interest on its debts and all of the sudden the dollar goes from being the universal currency of the world to being junk.
He says Congress must come together to act quickly and efficiently in addressing Secretary Mnuchin’s concerns and raise or suspend the ceiling. He’s confident the budget will push through, then Congress must act to pull the reigns back on spending with more fiscally responsible policies.
Groups Urging DOJ to Probe Planned Parenthood on Alleged Secret Tapes
More than a dozen pro-life groups and conservative organizations call on the Justice Department to investigate if Planned Parenthood illegally sold fetal tissue from abortions.
In a letter to the attorney general and acting FBI director, the groups asked the department to look into secretly taped videos that appeared to show the company’s staff discussing the issue.
The groups say the Obama administration turned a blind eye to the wrong doing and call for an investigation into the practices surrounding the scandal.
President Trump Pulls U.S. Out of Paris Climate Agreement
President Trump promises to negotiate a better deal after pulling the U.S. out of the Paris Climate Accord.
He made the announcement from the White House Thursday.
The President said the agreement allows other countries to gain financial advantage over the United States, so pulling out will help the U.S. compete on a global level.
He said starting now all implementation of the non-binding accord will stop, which will in turn bring money and jobs back to the U.S..
The President worked with EPA Director Scott Pruitt to come to the decision.
President Trump has long said the Obama-era deal adds more regulations that hurt american businesses.
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