Attorney
General Jeff Sessions on Monday lit into federal judges for what he
called a dramatic uptick in "outrageous" decisions threatening to
interfere with the separation of powers by exposing internal White House
deliberations.
In a fiery speech to the conservative Heritage
Foundation in Washington, Sessions warned that "once we go down this
road in American government, there is no turning back." He vowed to take
"these discovery fights to the Supreme Court in emergency postures. ...
We intend to fight this, and we intend to win."
Sessions
specifically singled out New York district court judge Jesse M. Furman,
who ruled that Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross could be questioned in an
ongoing lawsuit concerning the legality of the Trump administration's
decision to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census.
Furman's
decision, Sessions said, contradicts longstanding statutory provisions
that protect certain executive branch discussions from disclosure, in
order to encourage free and open deliberations by executive branch
officials. The plaintiffs in the lawsuit, including several liberal
states, are arguing in part that the White House added the citizenship
question for political reasons.
The judge wants "to hold a trial
over the inner workings of a Cabinet secretary’s mind," and
inappropriately allow inquiry into the motivations for the Trump
administration's decisions, Sessions said.
Furman's order, which
was upheld by a New York federal appellate court, has been stayed by
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The full Supreme Court is
expected to decide the issue soon.
"Once we go down this road in American government, there is no turning back." — Attorney General Jeff Sessions
The
pending court challenges against the Trump administration's decision to
add a citizenship question, legal experts tell Fox News, face an uphill
battle not only because conservatives now command a 5-4 majority on the
Supreme Court, but also because traditionally it's been the White
House's prerogative to decide whether to inquire about citizenship on
the census.
Former President Barack Obama's administration didn't ask the question in the 2010 census amid
fears it would cause illegal immigrants to avoid answering their census
questions -- and thus not count toward population totals used to
determine the number of seats each state receives in the House of
Representatives. (The citizenship question was last asked on the census
in 1950, but beginning in 1970, a citizenship question was asked in a
long-form questionnaire sent to a relatively small number of households,
alongside the main census. In 2010, there was no long-form
questionnaire.)
Democrats would lose out because the citizenship
question would affect predominately liberal districts, but that's not a
legally sufficient objection, legal analysts say. TRUMP CENSUS BUREAU NOMINEE QUIZZED BY SENATORS ON CITIZENSHIP QUESTION
"There
is no credible argument to be made that asking about citizenship
subverts the Constitution and federal law," Chapman University law
professor and constitutional law expert John Eastman told Fox News. "The
recent move is simply to restore what had long been the case."
Nevertheless,
Sessions said Monday, liberal states and nonprofits have continued to
push even longshot legal challenges in order to dig around in executive
branch deliberations.
"This is not the first time we’ve had to
seek emergency appellate intervention to stop outrageous discovery,"
Sessions said. Last year, the government filed a successful emergency
motion to stop a district court's ruling that permitted plaintiffs to
question a Department of Homeland Security counselor about advice
relating to the contentious Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals
(DACA) program.
Sessions called that lower court ruling a "blatant
violation of deliberative process and attorney-client privileges" and
warned that it would have a "chilling effect" on deliberations in the
White House.
He added, "Too many judges believe it is their right, their duty, to act upon their sympathies and policy preferences."
The
attorney general blamed Obama for encouraging that approach. "One
argument for activism was advocated openly by President Obama when he
declared his judicial nominees must judge with 'empathy.' It is a
seductive argument. But whatever empathy is, it’s more akin to emotion,
bias, and politics than law," Sessions said.
"In the recent DACA litigation, for example, a judge last year told one of our DOJ litigators, 'You can’t come into court to espouse a position that is heartless,'"
Sessions continued. "Not illegal. Not unlawful. Heartless. And later,
after I responded in a speech that it isn’t a judge’s job to decide
whether a policy is 'heartless,' the judge again scolded the DOJ lawyer
by stating that I 'seem to think the courts cannot have an opinion.'"
Judge Nicholas Garaufis denied the government's motion to dismiss a
DACA lawsuit, citing President Trump's "bigoted" comments.
(Reuters, FIle)
That judge, U.S. District
Judge Nicholas Garaufis, was appointed to the bench by former President
Bill Clinton. He ruled in March that a lawsuit seeking to preserve the
federal DACA program can continue -- citing candidate Donald Trump's
"racial slurs" and "epithets."
“One might reasonably infer,”
Garaufis said in his politically charged ruling, “that a candidate who
makes overtly bigoted statements on the campaign trail might be more
likely to engage in similarly bigoted action in office.”
Separately,
Sessions also said the 27 nationwide federal injunctions issued by
individual judges during the Trump administration so far -- which
brought temporary halts to high-profile policies like his ban on travel from Muslim-majority nations -- constitute an unprecedented "judicial encroachment."
"It
is emphatically not the duty of the courts to manage the government or
to pass judgment on every policy action the Executive branch takes,"
Sessions said. "In the first 175 years of this Republic, not a single
judge issued one of these orders."
In his confirmation hearings
for the Supreme Court in September, then-nominee Brett Kavanaugh was
asked by Louisiana Republican Sen. John Kennedy about the
constitutionality of individual federal judges issuing nationwide
injunctions against presidential action, a recent phenomenon. Kavanaugh
demurred, saying he could not discuss potential pending issues before
the Supreme Court.
Sessions noted that Associate Justice Clarence
Thomas, who concurred in the high court's decision earlier this year to
reinstate Trump's travel ban, wrote that such injunctions “take a toll
on the federal court system—preventing legal questions from percolating
through the federal courts, encouraging forum shopping, and making every
case a national emergency for the courts and for the executive branch.”
He
added: "Executive branch officers do not work for the judiciary. We
work for the president of the United States. Respect runs both ways."
President
Trump's inner circle is "very confusing" for foreign diplomatic
officials in Washington to navigate, China's U.S. ambassador Cui Tiankai
told "Fox News Sunday" in an exclusive wide-ranging interview.
Cui added that U.S. warships are "on the offensive" near China, days after a U.S. destroyer nearly collided
with a Chinese military vessel in the South China Sea. The Pentagon
said the Chinese ship came within 45 yards of the U.S. destroyer, in an
intentionally "unsafe" maneuver.
Cui's comments come as Chinese
President Xi Jinping and Trump prepare for a possible meeting at the G20
summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina, next month, amid a rapidly
escalating trade conflict between the two nations that some have called a
new cold war.
Asked by host Chris Wallace whether Trump listens
primarily to hardliners like trade director Peter Navarro -- who has
characterized China as the economic "parasite of the world" -- or
moderates like chief economic adviser Larry Kudlow and Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Cui responded simply, "You tell me."
The envoy added that other ambassadors seemingly have the same issue. President Trump has repeatedly said he tries to avoid "telegraphing" his moves to foreign adversaries.
"Honestly,
I’ve been talking to ambassadors of other countries in Washington,
D.C., and this is also part of their problem," Cui said. "They don’t
know who is the final decision-maker. Of course, presumably, the
president will take the final decision, but who is playing what role?
Sometimes it could be very confusing."
Trump, citing widespread
intellectual property theft in China that cuts into the profits of U.S.
companies doing business there, placed tariffs on approximately $200 billion of Chinese imports in
September, following his imposition of significant tariffs on nearly
$35 billion in Chinese goods in July. China quickly retaliated with $60
billion in tariffs of its own.
The White House has bipartisan
support for hitting back at Chinese intellectual property theft. In an
interview in June, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.,
ordinarily a fierce Trump critic, agreed with the administration's China policy and said that the country "takes total advantage" of the U.S.
“Not
only do they steal our intellectual property, they keep our good
companies out, and say the only way you’re going to be able to sell your
American products in China … is if you come to China, make them there,
and give us the techniques and intellectual property,” Schumer said.
And the president has insisted his tariffs are already having a major impact.
"Their
economy has gone down very substantially, and I have a lot more to do
if I want to do it," Trump told "Fox & Friends" last week. "They
lived too well for too long and, frankly, I guess they think the
Americans are stupid people. Americans are not stupid people. We were
led badly when it came to trade." WATCH: HAS US ENTERED NEW COLD WAR WITH CHINA?
But
in his interview with Fox News, Cui denied that China permits or
engages in widespread intellectual property theft, and said even the
suggestion was an affront to the country's population.
"I think
all of these accusations about how China has developed are groundless
and not fair to the Chinese people," he told Wallace. "You see, China
has 1.4 billion people. It would be hard to imagine that one-fifth of
the global population could develop and prosper not by relying mainly on
their own efforts, but by stealing or forcing some transfer of
technology from others -- that’s impossible."
"It’s important to notice who started this trade war. We never want to have a trade war." — China's U.S. ambassador Cui Tiankai
He
added: "It’s important to notice who started this trade war. We never
want to have a trade war, but if somebody started a trade war against
us, we have to respond and defend our own interests."
Concerns
have been raised that China, the largest foreign holder of U.S.
Treasurys, might start dumping its holdings as a way to pressure the
United States in the trade dispute. But Mnuchin said this possibility
didn't concern him because it would be contrary to Beijing's economic
interests to start dumping its Treasury holdings, and would be "very
costly" to China.
Top U.S. officials have warned that the ongoing
conflict with China extends beyond trade. In Senate testimony on
Wednesday, FBI Director Christopher Wray said that "China, in many ways,
represents the broadest, most complicated, most long-term
counterintelligence threat we face."
He added that "Russia is ...
fighting to stay relevant after the fall of the Soviet Union,"
while "China is fighting tomorrow's fight…and it affects every sector of
our economy."
Vice President Pence, meanwhile, has accused China of trying to interfere with U.S. elections, including by targeting tariffs toward industries that support Trump and even spreading propaganda in U.S. media outlets.
In response, Cui effectively called the U.S. the aggressor in several spheres of influence. Chinese state-run media companies have recently bought newspaper inserts in U.S. newspapers to influence local opinion in favor of China.
"You
see, Chinese media, they are just learning from America media to use
all these means, to buy commercial pages from newspapers, to make their
views known or to cover what is happening here," Cui said. "This is
normal practice for all the media." (China does not generally permit
foreign-owned media companies to buy such political inserts in its own
domestic papers.) WATCH: HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY WARNS CHINA ENGAGING IN 'UNPRECEDENTED' INFLUENCE CAMPAIGN AHEAD OF MIDTERMS
The envoy also said that Chinese warships, which harassed and nearly collided with a U.S. destroyer recently
in the disputed South China Sea, had responded appropriately to an
intervention on their "doorstep." Beijing has built up military
fortifications on two contested Chinese man-made islands there despite pledging not to do so.
"Where
the incident took place, you were right to say it was in South China
Sea. So it’s at China’s doorstep," Cui told Wallace. "It’s not Chinese
warships that are going to the coast of California, or to the Gulf of
Mexico. It’s so close to the Chinese islands and it’s so close to the
Chinese coast. So who is on the offensive? Who is on the defensive? This
is very clear."
Cui said, however, that China would continue to
"faithfully" implement sanctions against its longtime ally, North Korea,
in order to restore stability to the region. He said a "coordinated,
phased, and step-by-step approach" to North Korean denuclearization is
the best approach, mirroring the position of that country's leader, Kim
Jong Un.
"How can you convince him to give up all the nuclear
weapons without any hope that the U.S. would be following a more
friendly policy towards him?" Cui asked.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was in Beijing last week,
where top Chinese officials vowed to take "all necessary measures" to
safeguard their country. They have since said that high-level
communications continue between the two countries.
Still, there
were signs tensions between China and the U.S. have eased somewhat in
recent days. Global stock market indexes bounced back sharply Friday
after their recent plunges, on word of the possible presidential
meeting.
And reports have emerged that Mnuchin has advised against
labeling China a currency manipulator — a status that could trigger
penalties. The Chinese currency has been falling in value against the
dollar in recent months, raising concerns that Beijing is devaluing its
currency to make Chinese goods more competitive against U.S. products.
Mnuchin
did not say this weekend what the forthcoming Treasury report, set to
come out next week, will conclude about China's currency practices. In
the past, Treasury has placed China on a watch-list but found that
Beijing did not meet the threshold to be labeled a currency manipulator.
The
Treasury secretary met Thursday with Yi Gang, head of China's central
bank. "I expressed my concerns about the weakness of the currency."
Mnuchin said.
Cui told Wallace that China, despite its ongoing
spat with the U.S. on a variety of fronts, remains optimistic about
November's planned meeting between Trump and Jinping. Kudlow, the chief
White House economic adviser, said on "Fox News Sunday" that the
one-on-one between the two leaders will "probably" happen.
"There’s
a good mutual understanding and good working relationship between the
two," Cui said. "I hope and I’m sure this will continue." Fox News' Samuel Chamberlain, Chris Wallace and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
A spokesman for a Democratic group that is supporting former
Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen in his run for a U.S. Senate seat referred
to “white male” gun owners as "Murican gun nuts" in response to a
Facebook post asking people to identify “the biggest terrorist
organization on the planet,” according to a report.
Mark Brown,
communications director for Tennessee Victory 2018, a group backing
Bredesen's run against Republican U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn for the
Senate seat occupied by retiring Republican Sen. Bob Corker, posted the
comment in 2015, the Washington Free Beacon reported.
Brown's comment attracted zero likes, according to the report.
It was not the first time Brown made incendiary comments about Republicans.
In a July 31, 2017 post, Brown allegedly wrote, “Exactly, f--- “reaching out” to Trump voters. The idiots aren’t listening.”
In
other posts, he has referred to President Trump as “Putin’s b---h,”
“racist,” a “f---stik,” an “insane f---,” and a “F---ing moron.”
Mark Brown, a communications official for the Tennessee Democratic Party, has described Trump voters as "idiots."
(Facebook)
Brown’s brazen approach is at odds with Bredesen, who has painted himself as a moderate willing to reach across the aisle.
Bredesen broke with his party during the controversy surrounding Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who was accused of sexual assault during
his Senate confirmation hearings. In a TV interview, Bredesen said he
would have supported Kavanaugh’s nomination if he were a senator because
the allegations lacked sufficient evidence.
Those
comments lost him the support of two prominent Democratic groups,
MoveOn and Priorities USA. But Bredesen has attracted the support of pop
singer Taylor Swift, who sharply criticized the GOP's Blackburn in an
online post that preceded a sharp rise in voter registrations in the
state. However, a new New York Times poll on Friday showed Blackburn leading Bredesen by 14 points.
In
a recent campaign ad, the former governor referred to himself as a
“lifelong gun owner” and a supporter of Second Amendment gun rights.
“As governor, I had an A rating from the NRA,” Bredesen said.
But the National Rifle Association called Bredesen’s ad “false” and “misleading.”
“Phil
Bredesen is a ‘D’ rated candidate, and he will not protect our
constitutional rights in Washington, D.C.,” said Chris W. Cox, chairman
of the NRA’s Political Victory Fund, in a statement.
Bredesen has
not publicly addressed Brown’s comments. In recent weeks the Senate
candidate appeared at fundraiser that headlined ex-New York City Mayor
Michael Bloomberg, a staunch supporter of gun control.
Earlier in
the campaign, Bredesen denounced Vice President Mike Pence’s
“name-calling” because he endorsed Blackburn, and called him a
“liberal.”
On Wednesday, Bredesen and Blackburn exchanged barbs in
their second and final debate ahead of the November midterms. The
outcome of the competitive red-state has attracted nationwide attention
due to a 51-49 Republican majority at stake.
MANCHESTER, N.H. – Less than 24 hours after reprising
his Emmy Award-winning parody of President Trump on “Saturday Night
Live,” Alec Baldwin took aim at the president again.
“In an
orderly and formal way, and lawful way, we need to overthrow the
government of the United States under Donald Trump,” Baldwin said Sunday
night at a major fundraising dinner for New Hampshire’s Democratic
Party.
“I flew here this morning after doing ‘Saturday Night Live’
last night,” the actor, comedian and longtime liberal political
activist told a crowd of some 800 party office-holders, candidates,
officials and activists, drawing loud applause.
Baldwin said his role as Trump on “SNL” wasn’t supposed to last as long as it has.
“‘Just
three shows,’ he said,” Baldwin recalled “SNL” producer Lorne Michaels
saying as he tried to convince the actor to portray then-candidate
Trump. “‘Till the election,’ he said. ‘Then he’ll be gone,’ he said.
‘Three shows. It will be fun,’ he said.”
But Trump’s victory over
Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election resulted in an
extension of Baldwin’s run on the late-night comedy show – including
this weekend’s opening sketch about Trump’s recent meeting with rapper Kanye West. ALEC BALDWIN: 'EVER SINCE I PLAYED TRUMP, BLACK PEOPLE LOVE ME'
Turning
serious, Baldwin then rallied the crowd to vote in next month’s midterm
elections, saying “this election and the one that follows in 2020 will
be the most consequential elections since the election of FDR.”
He
added: “It is time to overthrow the government of Donald Trump -- not
in a violent way or unlawful way -- but it must be overthrown
nonetheless.”
Baldwin ended his nearly 20-minute-long speech by putting his own spin on the president’s famous campaign slogan.
“Let’s make America great again by making Donald Trump a casino operator again,” he said.
“Let’s make America great again by making Donald Trump a casino operator again.”
— Alec Baldwin
Some
New Hampshire Republicans criticized the state’s Democrats for choosing
Baldwin as their keynote speaker. They pointed to Baldwin’s past
problematic behavior, including making abusive comments to and about
women, and making homophobic remarks.
Taking questions from reporters after his speech, Baldwin didn’t directly answer.
“Most
of the time people are trying to tar me with a brush about defending
Woody Allen,” he said, referring to the filmmaker who has long faced
allegations of sexual assault, which he has denied.
Baldwin also
told reporters that he’s “always dreamed” of running for office himself,
but explained it’s not in the cards for him at this time.
“My wife told me she’d divorce me if I ran for office,” he joked.
He
also downplayed suggestions that his Democratic activism would limit
the success of “The Alec Baldwin Show,” his new venture on ABC.
Baldwin
has long been a backer of Democratic candidates and causes. He famously
declared that he’d move to Canada if then-Texas Gov. George Bush won
the 2000 presidential election. Though Bush did win, Baldwin didn’t
move.
More recently, Baldwin campaigned last year for Democrat
Ralph Northam in Virginia’s hotly contested gubernatorial election. And
last November he headlined the Iowa Democrats’ major fall fundraising
gala. ALEC BALDWIN REVEALS DISLIKE FOR STEPHEN COLBERT OVER MEDDLING QUESTION
New
Hampshire is the state that holds the first presidential primary every
four years -- and Sunday night’s dinner over the years has been a key
stop for potential Democratic White House hopefuls.
Baldwin
previously made headlines in June when he told radio host Howard Stern
that if he made a 2020 presidential bid, he would beat Trump.
“If I ran, I would win,” Baldwin said. “I would absolutely win.”
Baldwin
said Sunday that if he had decided to run, “I thought it would be such a
pleasure to go around the country and try to remind people that, Let’s
get back to a time of common sense.”
But Baldwin said he’s not
very optimistic when he considers the potential field of Democrats vying
for the party’s presidential nomination in 2020.
“I’m hoping that
someone that isn’t necessarily on the horizon right now would
materialize,” Baldwin said, “because I don’t think anybody that’s a
frontrunner now of the top six, seven, eight names that I’ve seen, I
don’t think any of them is going to have an easy time of it.”
He also took another shot at the president.
“Every
day I wake up, I still am horrified,” he said. “I feel like I’m in some
dream that Trump is president of the United States. I almost can’t even
say it.”
President Trump and first lady Melania Trump were scheduled to travel
to Florida’s Panhandle on Monday to get a firsthand look at the
devastation in the region wrought by Hurricane Michael.
The president was also scheduled to visit South Georgia, which also was battered by Michael, Reuters reported. The storm came ashore Wednesday before moving up the East Coast with 155 mph winds.
The
president and first lady were scheduled to arrive at Elgin Air Force in
Florida before noon ET Monday and return to the White House in the
evening.
Late Sunday, Trump declared a state of emergency in
Georgia, releasing federal resources to help the state. The White House
said it was fully committed to helping state and local agencies with
recovery efforts. HURRICANE MICHAEL STRENGTHENS TO CATEGORY 4 STORM, CONSIDERED ‘EXTREMELY DANGEROUS’
As
a Category 4 hurricane on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale, Michael
was one of the most powerful storms to make landfall in U.S. history.
Federal Emergency Management Agency chief Brock Long has called the
destruction some of the worst he’s ever seen. Before being appointed to
head FEMA by President Trump, Long held emergency management positions
in Georgia and Alabama, and with a private consulting firm.
As of
Sunday, the storm had killed nearly 20 people in four states, while
dozens more remained missing in Florida Panhandle communities, Reuters reported. FEMA spokesman David Passey told Fox News: “We are confident that the number of people not yet accounted for will decline as family members can reconnect.”
Passey said FEMA and other agencies will remain in the area for several months to aid the recovery. The death toll was expected to rise
as rescue officials continue their search for bodies or survivors. But
damaged roads and infrastructure brought by the storm has hampered
rescue efforts, officials say. HURRICANE MICHAEL’S DEATH TOLL MAY RISE, AS RESCUERS COMB THROUGH RUBBLE
One of the hardest hit communities was Mexico Beach, Fla., whose mayor said dozens of residents remained unaccounted for.
“If
we lose only one life, to me that’s going to be a miracle,” Mayor Al
Cathey told reporters. He said of the 1,000 residents of Mexico Beach,
46 remained missing.
Cathey estimated 250 residents stayed behind
when the hurricane struck. He said search-and-rescue teams in the beach
town had combed areas with the worst damage. He said enough food and
water had been brought in for the residents who remain. Even some
cellphone service had returned to the devastated community.
Florida
Gov. Rick Scott said the storm left Mexico Beach with heavy debris and
rubble, with some homes blown across the street. He said more than 1,700
search workers have been deployed to check 25,000 homes.
Hope she runs in 2020 because if this is the best the democrats have President Trump will surely win again.
U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif. drew attention and criticism
for her exchanges with Brett Kavanaugh during a Senate panel's hearings
on Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court.
(Associated Press)
In what will
likely stoke speculation about a potential 2020 presidential run, U.S.
Sen. Kamala Harris of California plans to visit several states,
including Iowa, later this month ahead of the midterm elections.
Harris,
a Democrat, will stop in Des Moines on Oct. 22, where she is expected
to speak at an event organized by Polk County Democrats, and in Cedar
Rapids on Oct. 23, with other stops in between. She last visited the
state in 2008 as San Francisco’s district attorney to campaign for
then-U.S. Sen. Barack Obama.
In recent months, Harris, 53, has
actively campaigned for Democrats around the country ahead of next
month's midterms, helping to raise more than $5 million for party
candidates. She recently said she would "take a look" at a possible 2020
presidential run, the Hill reported.
The
first-term senator is one of several Democrats contemplating
presidential bids to challenge President Trump. Iowa is considered a
prime destination for potential presidential candidates, because the
Iowa caucuses traditionally launch a presidential election year.
Senate Judiciary Committee members Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif.,
left, and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., arrive at the chamber for the final
vote to confirm Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, at the Capitol in
Washington.
(Associated Press)
The other Democrats visiting Iowa have included U.S. Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, who recently headlined a party event
in Des Moines, and Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a former chairman of
the Democratic National Committee, who recently campaigned for Fred
Hubbell, the party's candidate for Iowa governor.
During the summer, Harris endorsed Deidre DeJear, a Democrat who is running for Iowa secretary of state.
But
before her Corn Belt visit, Harris will hold campaign events this
coming Friday in South Carolina and Oct. 21 in Wisconsin. She also
recently campaigned for Democrats in Arizona and Ohio.
Harris'
national profile rose sharply over her opposition to Supreme Court
Justice Brett Kavanaugh while serving on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
During
Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings, Harris and Kavanaugh had a testy
exchange over whether he discussed the Russia investigation being
conducted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller with anyone at a law firm
associated with Trump’s personal lawyer.
“I think you’re thinking
of someone and you don’t want to tell us,” Harris said when Kavanaugh
responded that he couldn’t remember if he’d had such conversations.
She called the hearing a “sham” and a “disgrace” and accused Kavanaugh of being anti-women.
“He
was nominated for the purpose of taking away a woman’s constitutionally
protected right to make her own health care decisions,” she tweeted in
September. “Make no mistake - this is about punishing women.”
But in September, the Washington Post gave Harris a rating of Four Pinocchios,
saying she selectively edited a video of Kavanaugh comments about
abortion-inducing drugs to argue that he is against birth control.
She’s
also been an outspoken voice against Trump and Republicans, blasting
them for their policies on everything from immigration to health care.
On Oct. 3 in Washington, Harris offered what the Atlantic magazine described as a possible preview of how she might respond to President Trump in a head-to-head campaign.
"Stop
being mean," Harris responded when asked for her reaction to Trump's
mocking of Kavanaugh accuser Christine Blasey Ford during a campaign
rally.
Some recent numbers may reveal why Harris is making the
Iowa visit: A recent David Binder Research poll of likely Iowa
caucus-goers showed that 37 percent favored former Vice President Joe
Biden for the Democratic presidential nomination 2020, Politico reported, followed by Elizabeth Warren (16 percent), Bernie Sanders (12 percent), Harris (10 percent) and Booker (8 percent).
The
Metropolitan Republican Club was vandalized with broken windows,
spray-painted anarchy signs and a threatening message that the 'attack
is merely a beginning'; reaction from NRATV contributor and former
Secret Service agent Dan Bongino.
Republicans
in New York called upon Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other Democrats to
denounce vandalism and violence after a Republican office in New York
City was damaged this week.
“Last night one of our state
headquarter buildings was attacked by radical leftists," said Marc
Molinaro, the state Republican Party's nominee to challenge Cuomo for
governor. "This type of political violence and rank vandalism is
unacceptable. We are one nation and one state. We must not revert to
violence under any circumstances."
Molinaro tweeted photos showing
that the New York state Republican headquarters had had windows
smashed, door locks filled with glue, and "anarchy" symbols
spray-painted on the entrance.
In a statement Friday, state
Republican Chairman Ed Cox joined Molinaro in calling the attack on GOP
headquarters "unacceptable."
Both GOP leaders called on Cuomo to condemn the attack "and call for calm on the political left."
Cox
accused Democrats -- including Hillary Clinton and former Attorney
General Eric Holder -- of "inciteful rhetoric" that he said "must be
stopped before someone gets hurt."
In an interview with CNN, Clinton made comments that some critics said seemed to condone mistreatment of Republicans.
“You
cannot be civil with a political party that wants to destroy what you
stand for, what you care about,” Clinton told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour
on Tuesday. “That’s why I believe, if we are fortunate enough to win
back the House and/or the Senate, that’s when civility can start again.
But until then, the only thing Republicans seem to recognize and respect
is strength.”
The comments were blasted by some Democrats as well as Republicans.
"I
can't imagine how you get anything done if you don't bring civility
back into politics," said U.S. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., in response
to Clinton's remarks. "And that goes for both sides."
Holder was
captured on video speaking Sunday at a campaign event for local Georgia
Democratic candidates. In the clip, he rejected former first lady
Michelle Obama's famous call for civility in politics – adopting a
confrontational tone that’s become increasingly fashionable amid the
Brett Kavanaugh confirmation fight and other debates.
"It is time
for us, as Democrats, to be as tough as they are, to be as dedicated as
they are, to be as committed as they are," Holder told the crowd.
"Michelle always says -- I love her; she and my wife are like, really
tight, which always scares me and Barack -- but Michelle always says, 'When they go low, we go high.' No. When they go low, we kick 'em."
President
Trump, in an interview Thursday on “Fox & Friends,” rebuked Holder,
calling his “kick” remark “disgusting” and “dangerous.”
“He better be careful what he’s wishing for,” Trump told Fox News. “That’s a disgusting statement for him to make.”
The
vandalism that occurred at the New York GOP headquarters overnight
Thursday was followed Friday evening by violence outside the same office
that resulted in three arrests.
Videos posted online showed several men kicking a man who was on the ground.
The
clashes followed a speech at the headquarters by the founder of a
far-right group. Police said Saturday they were reviewing video and
could make additional arrests.
The speaker was Gavin McInnes, founder of the Proud Boys, a group that describe themselves as "western chauvinists."
The
clashes appeared to be between the Proud Boys and groups that were
protesting McInnes' speech. No serious injuries were reported.
The three people who were arrested face assault charges.
After the Friday evening clashes, Cuomo denounced the violence that occurred at the GOP headquarters.
"Authorities
must review these videos immediately and make arrests and prosecute as
appropriate," he said. "Hate cannot and will not be tolerated in New
York."
New York City Public Advocate Letitia James, a Democrat who
is running for state attorney general, said, "I am disturbed and
disgusted by the videos I've seen of members of the neo-fascist, white
supremacist Proud Boys group engaging in hate-fueled mob violence on the
streets of New York City."
In response to Thursday's overnight
vandalism, Geoff Berman, executive director of the New York State
Democratic Committee, said his party has "zero tolerance for violence."
"This
type of divisiveness is repugnant to everything we believe as New
Yorkers," he said, before turning his criticism on Republicans. "That
being said, Ed Cox and Marc Molinaro's rhetoric on this is wildly
inappropriate. We need less hate and division - not more."
Joey Gibson, left, leader of Patriot Prayer, heads a previous rally in Portland, Ore., June 30, 2018.
Members of opposing groups violently clashed in
downtown Portland, Ore., on Saturday night during an event that was
billed as a march for “law and order.”
Participants
with the conservative Patriot Prayer group and counter-demonstrators
with Antifa got into a bloody melee outside a popular bar where members
on both sides used bear spray, fists and batons to beat each other, the Oregonian reported.
Police
fired pepper balls and other non-lethal impact munitions to break up
the brawls and there were no immediate reports of arrests. Earlier in
the evening, police reported seeing participants from both groups with
hard-knuckle gloves, knives and firearms.
No weapons were reported
seized. Authorities said four people received medical attention, but it
was not known if any were taken to a hospital.
The two groups have clashed in the city before.
The
march, dubbed “Flash March for Law and Oder in PDX,” was organized by
Patriot Prayer leader Joey Gibson in response to Portland Mayor Ted
Wheeler’s oversight of the city’s police department. (PDX is the
abbreviation for Portland International Airport that is sometimes used
as shorthand for the city as well.)
The
Patriot Prayer group gathered around 6 p.m. near Pioneer Courthouse
Square and marched through downtown holding a sign that read “Replace
PDX Mayor!”
The
violence erupted after Gibson and about three dozen people waving
American flags and reciting patriotic chants walked toward a street
memorial for Patrick Kimmons, 27, a black man who was fatally shot by
Portland police last month.
At the vigil, they were met by counter-protesters chanting “Black Lives Matter.” The fighting broke out 20 minutes later.
Video
posted online shows a protester at one point lighting an American flag
on fire. Seconds later someone snatches the flag and puts the flames
out.
Saturday’s violence unfolded amid a series of clashes between rival political factions that have gained national attention.
Gibson
called for the Saturday march in response to an Oct. 6 incident in
which a 74-year-old driver clashed with a group that was protesting
police brutality. The police department came under scrutiny for what
critics saw as a hands-off approach to the event.
“This isn't
political, it's just wrong,” a post on the event’s Facebook page reads.
“It's a lack of respect for not only the law but just other humans.”
In
a video of the incident that went viral, marchers are seen blocking
traffic and directing traffic when the motorist drives through a group
of marchers and then speeds off. Some protesters catch up to him and
begin pounding on the car before the driver leaves.
The driver later said he meant no harm, he just wanted to get away from the protest, Fox News reported.