The 116th Congress began with prayer.
The first day of the 116th Congress ended with profanity.
It
was 12:01 p.m. Thursday. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo., an ordained
Methodist minister from the St. James United Methodist Church in Kansas
City, climbed the dais in the House chamber to lead lawmakers in the
invocation.
“In unbridled optimism, I offer this prayer,” said Cleaver.
Cleaver
spoke of “the great challenges of this day, fraught with tribalism at
home and turbulence abroad.” He beseeched the House “to rise as a
legislative body above political selfishness” and “attempt to become
architects of a kinder nation.”
“Dedicate ourselves to the healing
of open sores in a land where there is far too much mistrust of those
who are different,” said Cleaver.
The House had not even sworn-in
freshman Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., at the time of Cleaver’s
intersession. But by nightfall, Tlaib captured more headlines than even fellow freshman Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.
Tlaib called the President of the United States a “m----- f-----.”
Tlaib’s expletive-laced rant presented House Republicans an opportunity on a platter.
“Is
this the behavior that we are going to find with this new majority
party in Congress?” asked House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif.
“We watched a brand-new speaker say nothing to (Tlaib). Somebody should
stand up to her. She’s the Speaker.”
A few minutes later, House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., headed to the White House for a meeting
with President Trump on the government shutdown.
“Are you going to talk to Tlaib about her language,” yours truly asked Pelosi as she headed for a Capitol exit.
“I’m going to talk to the president about his language,” retorted Pelosi.
Most
Democrats were beside themselves over Tlaib’s vulgar epithet. But
Members of Congress have long cataloged President Trump’s crude
discourse, ad hominem attacks and swearing.
“Look at what we’ve
heard for years from him,” observed one Democrat who asked to not be
identified when speaking about the president. “He set the standard. Of
course you’re going to start to hear talk like that from everybody now.”
“I
think that you also have seen yesterday and over the course of the last
24 hours, in particular, a real ramp-up in rhetoric. Name calling. The
kind of politicization and partisanship the American people are sick and
tired of,” claimed House Republican Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney,
R-Wy. Cheney accused Democrats of unleashing a “level of vitriol.”
Some recalled that Cheney’s father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, infamously told Sen. Pat Leahy, D-Vt., to “go f&$ yourself” during a 2004 visit to the Senate floor.
Former
House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., chastised Rep. Maxine Waters,
D-Calif., for suggesting that leftist demonstrators harass Trump
administration officials in restaurants and stores.
Are
Republicans trying to have it both ways? Calling out Tlaib’s obscenity
and the suggestions of Waters while many GOPers ignore remarks of
President Trump?
“I don’t think so,” replied Cheney.
Republicans
relish a sideshow like this. It takes focus off the partial government
shutdown and redirects attention on a still undefined Democratic House
majority.
Many have heard of Ocasio-Cortez. She’s presented an
unvarnished liberalism. A push for a “green new deal” and higher taxes.
All politics is local. That may work in the Bronx and other leftist
bastions. But does the public know much about moderate freshmen
Democrats who won in November?
Have they heard of Reps. Joe
Cunningham, D-S.C., Ben McAdams, D-Utah, or Jared Golden, D-Maine? They
all secured hard-fought wins in battleground districts.
Maybe not.
But
you can bet that when it comes to freshmen, people have heard of
Ocasio-Cortez and now Tlaib. Their politics may resonate in Democratic
strongholds. But the casual observer may perceive that the entire
Democratic freshman class is full of nothing but borderline socialists
and those who cuss out the President.
This cognizance could scare
some swing voters and does little for Democrats trying to build a
national brand that’s not urban-centric.
Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, questioned Mr. Trump’s character
to lead in a Washington Post op-ed. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ken., shot back
that Romney portrayed himself as “holier than thou.” Paul suggested
senators watch their language. Yet the Kentucky Republican sidestepped
questions about the President’s attacks on others.
“I just don’t think the president deserves to have a new senator coming in, attacking his character,” said Paul.
As speaker, Pelosi has wrestled with disciplining members for intemperate remarks – of even the opposite party.
Rep.
Joe Wilson, R-S.C., hectored President Obama during a speech to a Joint
Session of Congress in September, 2009, shouting “you lie!” House rules
bar lawmakers from making personal attacks or impugning the motives of a
president during a House session. The House didn’t vote to reprimand or
censure Wilson for his outburst. Pelosi opposed an official sanction.
House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., instead secured a less formal
“resolution of disapproval” to discipline his Palmetto State colleague.
Emanuel Cleaver was visibly upset at Tlaib’s broadside against the president, especially considering his opening prayer.
“There’s
a fear among some that we need to impeach the president. On the night
of my re-election, I said I’m not going back to Washington for
impeachment, but for improvement,” said Cleaver. “Obviously there are
some who see things differently.”
That said, Cleaver observed that
Mr. Trump’s own harsh rhetoric “has created a new kind of climate.” He
added that if Congress is to “heal the open sores infecting the entire
country” which he spoke about on opening day, lawmakers will “have to
rise above.”
“This makes the sore nastier and increases the
likelihood of contagion,” said Cleaver of Tlaib’s comments. “This young
person who just got elected may think this is okay.”
On Friday,
House Democrats rolled out their first big piece of legislation for the
new Congress: H.R. 1. It’s a bill designed to improve government
transparency. The legislation is numbered H.R. 1 because Democrats view
it as one of the most important. The majority party always gets the
first ten numbered bills in a Congress. Such a code would help observers
track a party’s priorities.
If it were up to Pelosi, she’d
probably assign number 100,000 to any articles of impeachment cooked up
by rank-and-file Democrats.
But Pelosi’s been here before. Many
Democrats pushed to impeach President George W. Bush over Iraq when
Democrats won the House in 2006 and tapped Pelosi as Speaker the first
time. The California Democrat quashed a revolt then. But can Pelosi
subdue a similar rebellion now?
It’s a big challenge, especially if firebrand Democrats refuse to temper their language.
After President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence wrapped up
separate meetings on border security and the ongoing partial federal
government shutdown on Sunday, Trump offered his strongest endorsement
yet of a proposal to build a steel wall, rather than a concrete barrier,
at the southern border.
Meanwhile, a Democratic source told Fox
News that the Pence-led meeting with bipartisan congressional staff at
the Eisenhower Executive Office Building (EEOB) near the White House had
accomplished little, and started nearly an hour late because Trump
administration officials were unprepared. Trump called the meeting
"productive" afterward, although he was not in attendance.
The
president framed his new pitch for a steel wall as a concession to
Democrats to move negotiations along, as the shutdown entered its 16th
day. Meanwhile, Democrats published the full text of several spending
bills to reopen the government on Sunday that the White House and Senate
Republicans have long said have no chance of becoming law because they
do not include any funding for a wall of any kind.
"They
don't like concrete, so we'll give them steel," Trump told
reporters after returning to the White House from a meeting with his
advisers at Camp David.
Trump also suggested he would rather wait
until the Supreme Court rules on the legality of his administration's
recission of the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)
program before negotiating with Democrats on the issue as part of the
talks to end the shutdown.
Several federal judges have held
that the Trump administration's reasons for terminating DACA were
legally insufficient under a federal administrative law statute, which
requires adequate notice and justification before the government
terminates a right it has previously granted.
"I would consider
DACA, but ... I'd rather have the Supreme Court rule, and then work with
the Democrats on DACA,' Trump said. "I want to help with DACA, but ...
you know, it's going to be before the Supreme Court very soon."
At
the sit-down at the EEOB, Pence -- along with Trump adviser and
son-in-law Jared Kushner and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen
Nielsen -- on Sunday discussed a variety of border-security measures
with congressional officials from both parties.
“Democrats were
given what they asked for, which was a detailed, breakdown list of the
administration’s proposals for border security that include the wall and
other border protection measures," a House GOP leadership aide told Fox
News. "Democrats were given the opportunity to ask questions of
Secretary Nielsen and hear DHS’ justification for the specific funding
requests. Their justifications made it abundantly clear why it is
necessary to have this level of funding to effectively secure our
border.”
A Democratic official familiar with the meeting, however,
said "no progress was made" at the Pence sit-down and charged that the
White House was unprepared.
Vice President Mike Pence, left, White House legislative affairs
aide Ja'Ron Smith, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, second
row left, White House Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, and others, walk
down the steps of the Eisenhower Executive Office building, on the White
House complex, after a meeting with staff members of House and Senate
leadership, Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex
Brandon)
“The meeting today at 1 p.m. started approximately 45
minutes late because the White House did not have the information
Democrats requested ready," the official told Fox News. "Yesterday,
Democrats asked for a full budget justification for the administration’s
position because the $5.7 billion wall request was not included in the
administration's fiscal year 2019 request and the administration has not
had a consistent position in various conversations with the Hill.
Democratic staff did not receive a full budget justification today. The Democratic source continued: "Three and a half months into a new
fiscal year, the Administration did not present any commensurate cuts in
the DHS budget to accommodate the increases they are seeking. Given
the failure of the White House to present a full budget justification
today, the Democratic staff pleaded again for the White House to change
course and re-open government by supporting the [bill to fund DHS
through February 8] and the six bill package that the House has passed
and has received broad bipartisan support in the Senate. The Vice
President said the President would not do that."
No further
meetings between Pence and congressional staff are currently planned.
For his part, Pence tweeted only that he was "back at the White House"
Sunday afternoon.
While Pence noted that the president was
"committed to securing the border, building the wall, & working to
reopen our government," he did not characterize the meeting
"productive," as he did on Twitter after a similar get-together with
congressional staff on Saturday.
However, in his own tweet later Sunday afternoon, Trump called Pence's meeting as a step forward.
"V.P.
Mike Pence and group had a productive meeting with the Schumer/Pelosi
representatives today," Trump wrote. "Many details of Border Security
were discussed. We are now planning a Steel Barrier rather than
concrete. It is both stronger & less obtrusive. Good solution, and
made in the U.S.A."
Trump's steel wall proposal was the continuation of a White House strategy that has developed in the past several weeks. Trump first floated the idea of using "artistically designed steel slats" for the wall, rather than concrete, in December.
He
then suggested taking the concrete wall off the table at a Rose Garden
news conference on Friday, as a concession to Democrats. And, acting
White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said in an interview on NBC
News' "Meet the Press" on Sunday that Trump "was willing to agree ... to
take a concrete wall off the table" in order to secure a deal to end
the ongoing shutdown.
"We've been in touch with a lot of people,
and I informed my folks to say that we'll build a steel barrier ---
steel -- that it will be made out of steel, that it will be less
obtrusive and it'll be stronger," Trump said. "And we're able to use our
great companies to make it, by using steel."
Some ex-White House officials have suggested Trump abandoned the idea of a concrete wall in the early days of his tenure. In an explosive interview
published shortly before his departure from the Trump administration at
the end of last year, former chief of staff John Kelly told the Los
Angeles Times that the White House had "left a solid concrete wall early
on in the administration, when we asked people what they needed and
where they needed it.
People look on from the Mexican side, left, as U.S. Border Patrol
agents on the other side of the U.S. border wall in San Diego prepare
for the arrival of hundreds of pro-migration protestors, seen from
Tijuana, Mexico, Monday, Dec. 10, 2018. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
Earlier Sunday, speaking to reporters before he
headed out to Camp David to discuss border security with top advisers,
Trump had predicted that the Pence-run meeting would not lead to any
major developments. TRUMP POINTS TO OBAMA, HILLARY'S PAST REMARKS TO BOLSTER PUSH FOR BORDER WALL
"I don't expect to have anything to happen at that meeting," Trump said.
Previous
meetings between Democrats and White House officials have been heated:
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Nielsen, the DHS secretary, reportedly
got into a tense confrontation on Wednesday in the Situation Room, with
the California Democrat interrupting Nielsen’s presentation on border
security and illegal immigration, telling her, “I reject your facts.”
The
president additionally said he was "totally involved" in shutdown
negotiations and claimed to have "tremendous support within the
Republican Party."
The longest federal government shutdown in U.S.
history lasted 21 days, and Trump has said repeatedly that current one
may last more than a year if Democrats are not willing to fund some of
the wall.
."They don't like concrete, so we'll give them steel." — President Trump
The
president also reaffirmed that he "may declare a national emergency
dependent on what's going to happen over the next few days" to construct
a border wall, and declared that Republicans and Democrats were "going
to have some very serious talks" beginning on Monday.
However, speaking on "Fox News Sunday,"
Democratic Rhode Island Rep. David Cicilline suggested Trump did not
have the authority to declare an emergency to build the border wall.
"I
don’t think the president has that authority -- he would have to meet a
very high standard," Cicilline said. "Article I establishes the
Congress of the United States and gives us the responsibility of
appropriating money, so I don’t think the president has the authority to
do that, and I hope he will try to work with Congress to resolve this
disagreement but open the government first."
The Democrat-led
House last week approved one amalgamated spending bill, addressing six
areas of spending and one measure to fund the Department of Homeland
Security through Feb. 8. The House approved both bills on a bipartisan
basis, but Senate Republicans and the White House have said they were
non-starters without wall money.
A migrant from Honduras pass a child to her father after he jumped
the border fence to get into the U.S. side to San Diego, Calif., from
Tijuana, Mexico, Thursday, Jan. 3, 2019. Discouraged by the long wait to
apply for asylum through official ports of entry, many migrants from
recent caravans are choosing to cross the U.S. border wall and hand
themselves in to border patrol agents. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)
This week, the House is set to start approving
these measures on an individual basis. On Sunday, Democrats posted the
full text of the bills, in keeping with their recent rules change
requiring 72 hours of advanced notice to the public before members vote
on most new legislation.
Fox News has learned the House Rules Committee will meet late Tuesday
afternoon to tee up some of these measures for the floor. The Rules
Committee is the gateway for most legislation to reach the House floor.
The
House is expected to consider the Financial Services and General
Government appropriations bill Wednesday. This measure deals with the
Treasury Department and funds the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
By the end of next week, the House likely will have passed different
versions of all funding bills to re-open the government -- twice.
In
an interview Sunday, South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham
warned the shutdown could not end as long as the "radical left" insisted
on calling Republicans racist for supporting immigration officials.
"We’re
negotiating with people who will accuse all of us who support a wall as
part of border security as racists," Graham said on CBS News' "Face the
Nation" on Sunday. "As long as the radical left is in charge, we’re not
going to get anywhere."
Rising Democratic star Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., told
CBS News' “60 Minutes” in an interview broadcast Sunday that she is “a
radical” who wants to use her newfound position in Congress to make new
progressive laws in America.
“If that’s what radical means, then call me a radical,” Ocasio-Cortez said, when questioned about her “radical agenda.”
She also responded to critics who have pointed out factual errors
in some of her tweets. Interviewer Anderson Cooper noted that her claim
the Pentagon's accounting errors could have funded most of "Medicare
for All" received "Four Pinocchios" from The Washington Post.
Ocasio-Cortez
fired back: "I think that there's a lot of people more concerned about
being precisely, factually and semantically correct than about being
morally right... Whenever I make a mistake. I say, 'Okay, this was
clumsy,' and then I restate what my point was. But it's-- it's not the
same thing as-- as the president lying about immigrants. It's not the
same thing, at all."
She said “it’s only been radicals” like
Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Delano Roosevelt who have
altered the course of history and made progress in America.
The
Democrat said she was working as a waitress and bartender when she
decided to run for Congress. “When you can’t have health care, that is
not dignified,” she told Cooper, noting like many millennials, she had
student loans and no health insurance.
Ocasio-Cortez also said she
didn't think it was unrealistic to bring her ideas into action, perhaps
radical for America, but mainstream in Europe: “We pay more per capita
in health care and education for lower outcomes than many other nations.
And so for me, what’s unrealistic is — is what we’re living in right
now.”
She also said it was problematic which ambitious policies in
American politics were pursued based on funding: “No one asks how we’re
gonna pay for this Space Force. No one asked how we paid for a $2
trillion tax cut. We only ask how we pay for it on issues of housing,
healthcare and education.”
Ocasio-Cortez, sworn in as Congress’ youngest member on Thursday, is one of a number of Democrats who backs the Green New Deal — which aims to combat both climate change and income inequality with a massive and costly economic overhaul.
Ocasio-Cortez
has called the aim — funded in part by slapping a tax as high as 70
percent on top earners — “a wartime-level, just economic mobilization
plan to get to 100% renewable energy.” JUSTIN HASKINS: 5 THINGS OCASIO-CORTEZ DOESN'T WANT YOU TO KNOW ABOUT THE GREEN NEW DEAL
Its
framework includes eliminating greenhouse gas emissions from
manufacturing and agriculture and “dramatically” expanding energy
sources to meet 100 percent of power demand through renewable sources.
Organizers
with the Sunrise Movement activist group have framed The Green New Deal
as a make-or-break issue for Democratic voters, particularly young
voters.
Stephen O'Hanlon, Sunrise’s spokesman, told Fox News via
email Sunday night: “This is a question of priorities. Instead of
spending billions subsidizing oil and gas corporations and giving tax
breaks to the wealthiest Americans, we can choose to put that money
toward giving my generation a livable future and providing every a good
job to every American ready to get to work making our country stronger.”
Ocasio-Cortez said she is willing as a representative to compromise, however: “It’s just about what we choose to compromise.”
She
said the centrism of Democrats has damaged the lives of everyday
Americans: “We as a party have compromised too much, and we’ve lost too
much of who we’re supposed to be and who we are.”
When asked about President Trump, she spoke raw.
“Yeah. Yeah. No question,” Ocasio-Cortez replied when asked if Trump is racist.
She called him “a symptom of a problem.”
Ocasio-Cortez
added: “The president certainly didn’t invent racism, but he’s
certainly given a voice to it and expanded it, and created a platform
for those things.”
The White House responded to CBS News:
“Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez’s sheer ignorance on the matter can’t cover
the fact that President Trump supported and passed historic criminal
justice reform.”
Christian Bale made his feelings about former vice president Dick
Cheney quite clear in his acceptance speech for the Golden Globe for
Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy for "Vice."
Bale, 44, thanked his wife, Sibi Blazic, profusely before getting political.
The
critically acclaimed British actor said he was "cornering the market on
charisma-free a—holes ... What do we think, Mitch McConnell next?"
He added, "Thank you to Satan for giving me inspiration to play this role."
Bale
previously spoke to Fox News about playing Cheney where he expressed
his admiration for the former George W. Bush administration member, but
never previously spoke about the Republican Majority Leader.
“He
was a wonderful family man — he’s a great dad, he’s an avid reader, he
has a brain like a vice and he constantly reads history,” Bale told Fox
News of Cheney at the premiere of “Vice" on Dec. 11 in Beverly Hills,
Calif. ”He was very laid-back. He would have been very happy to be a
lineman in Wyoming if he hadn’t met Lynne, who said to him, ‘No, that
doesn’t cut it. You need some ambition.’ What would have been if they
hadn’t met?”
However, when asked if he believes the real-life Cheney will find the movie enjoyable or irksome, Bale could only speculate.
“I
think he’ll certainly find it entertaining, at the very least. I think
he’s very thick-skinned — you know. He has no remorse or regrets about
what he’s done — he always says, ‘I would do it again in a minute.’ He
doesn’t back down — he doesn’t apologize about anything,” Bale said.
“So, I think he’s a thick-skinned guy and I’d love to hear his thoughts.
He’s a very intelligent individual, no matter what your thoughts are
about him — he’s a smart cookie. So, I do hope so.”
“Right. Yeah, I
think I’m done — you know. Everything hurts,” he said with a laugh.
“Everything hurts now. I’ve gotten really stout thinking if I can manage
this again, and the answer is probably no.”
"Vice" also stars Amy Adams playing Lynne Cheney, Steve Carell as Donald Rumsfeld and Sam Rockwell as Bush and many others.
"Vice" led the Golden Globes nominations with six nods.
The media finally got the fun House they wanted — run entirely by
Democrats. And their arrival made journalists nearly scream in PC glee.
They’ve
been fighting President Donald Trump all alone for two years. The
arrival of Speaker Nancy Pelosi and liberal media darlings like
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez set off a veritable House party in the press.
They now have powerful allies who will do what they want — attack Trump.It was “a triumphant return to power” for new House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi, “a new era”
and “an earthquake in Trump world.” CNN even called it “girl power” and
pretended she was reaching out in a “non-partisan” way to “women of all
parties.” The network actually took her out to her native Baltimore to
get ice cream from her favorite ice cream shop.
ABC’s Senior National Correspondent Terry Moran
emphasized that “[f]or the first time President Trump entering his
third year as president is gonna face an opposition with real power in
Washington.”
Apparently, 24-7 press opposition wasn’t enough.
The Washington Post didn’t hide its feelings about the power switch: “Pelosi seeks a return to normalcy, but an unpredictable president may not comply.”
The “Democracy Dies in Darkness” paper found the liberal who promised
to “light the way” and could barely contain itself. The paper
practically took on the role of Pelosi’s press office, noting, “she has a
long history working productively with Republicans.”
The New York Times described Pelosi as an “Icon of Female Power” and talked about her rise “from the well-mannered daughter of a Baltimore mayor to a savvy legislator.”
It
wasn’t just about Pelosi. Journalists celebrated everything from the
Democrats’ fashion sense to diversity — already a media sacred term. The
word “diverse” was on many reporters’ lips. But heaven help anyone who
didn’t look right (or, left?).
Journalists focused on the women’s
clothes and white men’s race — because when they do it, it’s not sexist
or racist. Politico’s Congress reporter Rachel Bade
skewered the white Republicans in their dark suits. “Sitting above the
chamber, you see the stark contrast in color btw the GOP & Dem side:
the Rs are all in dark suits. Almost all white men. The Dem side is
speckled with pinks and purples and greens being worn by the historic #
of women. Also very ethnically diverse,” she tweeted.
Washington Post Fashion Critic Robin Givhan
celebrated the Democrats’ fashion sense. She declared, “fashion was not
merely a footnote, it was a rallying cry, a defiant gesture, a point of
cultural pride — a glorious, theatrical declaration of self. It was
white suits and pink dresses, Native American artistry, a Palestinian
thobe, a kente cloth stole, a hijab and a skintight pencil skirt with a
fur stole.”
Being liberal is a fashion statement. 2. Wall vs. shutdown: The government shutdown and the border wall continue to vex the media who see no reason for either.
This
was obvious when Trump held a short briefing in the press room and
journalists freaked out that he didn’t take questions. CNN called it, “Trump's press 'briefing' that wasn't.” Mediaite
summed up the press room reaction with this: “White House Reporters
Heckle Trump After Speech: ‘The Point of the Briefing Room is to Take
Questions!!!’”
Theoretical GOP consultant Rick Wilson
took the opportunity to mock the Republican base. He told CNN’s Don
Lemon, “the wall has always been a con for Donald Trump’s credulous rube
ten-toothed base.” One commentator said it was time for the GOP to “change the president’s diapers.”
The New York Times gave an entire page in its Sunday Review for an essay
by illegal immigrant activist and sometime journalist Jose Antonio
Vargas. It was titled “Portraits From a Caravan – Migrants escaping
peril wait in Tijuana for their American dream.” Just in case you
thought it might be neutral.
Thankfully, a little truth has seeped into the media coverage of the shutdown. Axios CEO Jim VandeHei characterized
the shift in the Democrat Party: “I think the feeling that they have to
appear to be really strong by supporting a lot more border security,
that that has waned, and that the enthusiasm of the Democratic Party is
for protecting immigrants.” 3. This Is CNN: New Year’s Eve is always a tough holiday for CNN as it trots out major anchors and mixes them with lots of alcohol.
Anchors Don Lemon and Anderson Cooper were both drinking. Anchor Brooke Baldwin even tweeted, “Thanks to all of y’all who watched, tweeted, and got #drunkdonlemon trending another year.”
I’ll let Daily Caller White House Correspondent Amber Athey explain the rest. “CNN reporter Randi Kaye kicked off New Year’s Eve by drinking champagne through a bong made out of a snorkel.”
Ah, journalism.
Then there was the self-absorbed segment with
“New Day” Co-host Alisyn Camerota who was upset about the social media
posts of a retired American Marine arrested by Russia for alleged
spying. Why? Because he posted, “Just drinking coffee and watching fake
news,” as he was pictured in front of a giant CNN logo.
Camerota
was actually interviewing the man’s twin brother and rather than show
sympathy over being arrested by Russian thugs, she fixated on the
arrested man’s disdain for CNN. “I'm not taking this personally that
he's pictured with CNN, but I just am wondering is this a statement on
his part somehow?” she claimed, though it was obvious she took it
personally.
Then again, the press always takes criticism personally.
As
Hollywood wrestles with what to do about the upcoming Oscars telecast
following the Kevin Hart controversy, one writer thinks he knows the
perfect host: veteran actor James Woods.
In a Saturday op-ed piece for the New York Post,
media writer Jon Levine argues that Woods, 71, could draw millions of
new and old viewers to the annual Hollywood gala during an era when
award shows of all kinds are facing declining ratings and accusations of
anti-conservative bias.
Woods, a Trump-loving conservative, has
gained a following in recent years by bashing critics of the president
and liberals in general on Twitter. He currently has 1.9 million
followers.
“Yes,
there would be 'outrage,'" Levine writes. “Hollywood’s Jacobins of
propriety would express their horror. Screenshots of trollish old tweets
(and there have been many) would make the rounds. Words like 'racist'
and 'sexist' would fly a mile a minute. But those costs would be a
pittance compared to the millions of new viewers he’d bring in (along
with the old viewers who’d be excited to see something different for a
change).”
Levine cites the current climate of political
correctness, noting that comic legends like Joan Rivers, Don Rickles and
even Jerry Seinfeld would not “escape today’s censors.”
“So, in
that spirit, why not go full bore with James Woods? Embracing the
offensive and learning to laugh at ourselves should be things that bring
us together,” he writes.
The Oscars were sent into crisis mode in December when comedian Hart was selected to host the 91st Academy Awards,
scheduled for Feb. 24. Within 24 hours, several of Hart's years-old
tweets and jokes, which some had deemed anti-gay, had resurfaced.
LGBTQ groups immediately called for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to rescind Hart's hosting invite.
In
one of the tweets, Hart wrote: “Yo if my son comes home & try’s 2
play with my daughters doll house I’m going 2 break it over his head
& say n my voice ‘stop that’s gay.”
The meme that Woods posted in July said #LetWomenDecide and
#NoMenMidterm. Woods acknowledged the tweet was "not likely" real.
(Twitter)
Woods has also come under fire for several tweets and was even temporarily locked out of Twitter for a satirical meme encouraging men not to vote in the 2018 midterm elections.
In 2017, he likened a child to a serial killer in what many called a transphobic tweet.
"This
is sweet. Wait until this poor kid grows up, realizes what you've done,
and stuffs both of you dismembered into a freezer in the garage," he
tweeted.
He also used the social media platform to help a veteran
contemplating suicide. The actor offered to talk with the veteran
privately.
“Andrew, don’t feel embarrassed that you reached out in
the darkness. Nobody thinks you’re foolish for that. You know every one
of us reaching out to you right now has some depression, too. I’ll say
it. I do,” Woods wrote. "I’m following you now, so you can DM me. We can
talk privately. Or we can talk openly right here. Lot of people worried
about you right now.
“So think about this. A lot of vets, I
understand, have come to where you are tonight. If you could just push
this decision off tonight, at least, maybe you would also inspire
another vet to seek help. You could save another man, too. By waiting to
do this.” Amid the outcry over his selection as Oscars host, Hart, 39, apologized to the LGBTQ community and stepped down
from the hosting gig. He is now “evaluating” retaking the job after
Ellen DeGeneres told him she reached out to the Academy on his behalf
and they said they wanted him to host.
“I called the Academy today
because I really want you to host the Oscars,” DeGeneres told Hart in
her talk show that aired Friday. “We want him to host, whatever we can
do, we’d be thrilled,” DeGeneres said the Academy told her. “The Academy
is saying what can we do to make this happen.”
Hart told DeGeneres he was still angry about how the tweets were brought up less than a day after he was given the hosting job.
“This
is stuff I have addressed. I’m not going to pay it any mind because
when you feed into that stuff you only add more fuel to the fire,” Hart
said. “You have put a lot of things on my mind. Leaving here, I’m
promising you I’m evaluating this conversation … Let me assess, just sit
in the space and really think.”
Or the Academy could take a cue from writer Levine and give the opportunity to someone like Woods.
Former U.S. Rep. Trey Gowdy served for four terms before leaving the House last week. (Fox News)
Former Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., hit back at
Democrat Elizabeth Warren over Twitter in response to the
Massachusetts Democrat's claim that he retired from Congress to collect a
“fat lobbyist paycheck.”
Warren cited a Daily Caller article on Friday that reported Gowdy would be joining Nelson Mullins, a South Carolina law and lobbying firm.
“@TGowdySC
foamed at the mouth with power in Congress, then retired because he
claimed he didn't enjoy it. Now it’s clear: Trey Gowdy just wanted a fat
lobbyist paycheck. That should be illegal,” she tweeted.
She then called for a lifetime ban on lobbying by former members of Congress.
"We
need a lifetime ban on lobbying for members of Congress. And fix the
swiss cheese def of 'lobbying' so anyone who gets paid to influence
Washington has to register. Public service shouldn’t be a launching pad
for guys like @TGowdySC & @JoeLieberman to enrich themselves."
Gowdy,
who served for four terms before leaving Congress last week, responded
on Twitter, "I'm not lobbying. Not now. Or ever. Perhaps you were
cracking open a beer when that was announced,” referring an Instagram
live video of Warren opening a beer. "Don't mind your criticisms. Just
be more sensitive to facts.”
Warren announced this week she launched an exploratory committee to consider whether to jump into the 2020 presidential race. Gowdy
has been a target for Democrats going back to when he chaired the House
Benghazi Committee, which many Democrats decried as a witch hunt with
the intention of disrupting Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign.
U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., blamed the "radical followers"
of U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., in his decision to end
an online debate over the U.S. tax rate.
U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., abruptly
halted a Twitter debate with newcomer Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
of New York early Sunday after at least three commenters made references
to the June 2017 shooting in which Scalise and three other people were
shot by a left-wing activist.
“snipe his a--,” one Twitter user wrote, in support of Ocasio-Cortez.
“she’s
got better aim that James Hodgkinson, that’s for sure,” another wrote,
comparing Ocasio-Cortez’s Twitter responses to the marksmanship of the
suspect in the Virginia shooting, a Bernie Sanders supporter who later
died in a shootout with police.
“Kick his cane,” a third wrote.
Prior
to the comments, Scalise and Ocasio-Cortez had been debating the
Democrat’s proposal for enacting a tax rate of up to 70 percent on
income. Scalise had called for letting Americans “keep more of their own
hard-earned money.”
He claimed that Democrats like Ocasio-Cortez
instead wanted to tax Americans’ income at higher rates in order to
“give it to leftist fantasy programs.”
But after the Twitter followers’ comments appeared, Scalise opted to end the online discussion.
“Hi
@AOC,” Scalise wrote to Ocasio-Cortez. “Happy to continue this debate
on the Floor of the People’s House, but it’s clearly not productive to
engage here with some of your radical followers. #StayClassy”
Scalise’s
tweet appeared about 1 a.m. ET Sunday, or about two hours after
Ocasio-Cortez’s late Saturday tweet, in which the newly sworn-in
congresswoman claimed that Scalise didn’t understand “how marginal tax
rates work.”
“Oh that’s right, almost forgot,” the Democratic
socialist wrote. “GOP works for the corporate CEOs showering themselves
multi-million bonuses; not the actual working people whose wages +
healthcare they’re ripping off for profit.”
If Ocasio-Cortez had seen Scalise’s 1 a.m. tweet, she offered no immediate response early Sunday.
The
29-year-old New Yorker, who stunned much of the political world in June
when she defeated longtime Democratic U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley in a
primary and then won the state’s 14th Congressional District seat in
November, has been drawing increased media attention this week – both
for taking the oath of office Thursday and for an anticipated appearance
Sunday on CBS’s “60 Minutes.”
Previews of that taped CBS
interview included references to the Democrat’s 70 percent tax-rate
plan, to which Scalise and others reacted during the week.
Scalise,
the House Republican whip, was himself featured on “60 Minutes,” in his
first TV interview months after the Virginia shooting.
The
53-year-old congressman from New Orleans, who represents Louisiana’s 1st
Congressional District, spoke of the “little miracles” he was achieving
daily during his recovery.
Also wounded in the Virginia attack
were Zack Barth, a congressional aide; Matt Mika, a lobbyist; and
Crystal Griner, a U.S. Capitol police officer.
Scalise would later write about the shooting in the book, “Back in the Game: One Gunman, Countless Heroes, and the Fight for My Life,” which was published in November.